Coursera: Dozens of Free, Massive, and Open Online Courses


Titus Andronicus writes “Professors Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng of Stanford University announced a major expansion in the catalog of free, massive, open online courses being offered by the company they founded, Coursera. The subject areas include computer science, mathematics, and business. The providers include Stanford, Princeton, the University of Michigan, and the University of Pennsylvania. Even more courses are expected to be announced by competitors such as Udacity, MITx, Minerva, and Udemy — perhaps soon. Is this the future of education?”


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Iranian finance/tech manager publishes 3,000,000 bank accounts’ details and PINs

A finance technology manager named Khosrow Zarefarid discovered a critical flaw in Iran’s online banking systems. He extracted 1,000 account details (including card numbers and PINs) and emailed them to the CEOs of 22 Iranian banks along with detailed information about the vulnerability. A year later, nothing had been done. Zarefarid extracted 3 million accounts’ details from the bank’s systems and posted them to ircard.blogspot.ca. Many Iranian banks have now frozen their customers’ accounts and are only allowing PIN-change transactions at ATMs. Some banks have texted their customers to warn them of the breach. The Central Bank of Iran has published an official notice of the breach, but the notice does not say that the underlying vulnerability has been fixed, or even whether it is being addressed. Zarefarid is said to have left Iran, though his whereabouts are not known, at least to Emil Protalinski, who wrote about the breach for ZDNet:


It does not appear as if Zarefarid stole money from the accounts; he merely dumped the account details of around 3 million individuals, including card numbers and PINs, on his blog: ircard.blogspot.ca. I found the link via his Facebook account, along with the question “Is your bank card between thease 3000000 cards?”

…Zarefarid previously worked as a manager at a company called Eniak, which operates the
Shetab (Interbank Information Transfer Network) system, an electronic banking clearance and automated payments system used in Iran. The company also manufactures and installs point of sale (POS) devices. In other words, Zarefarid worked for a firm that offered services to Iranian banks for accepting electronic payments.

3 million bank accounts hacked in Iran

(via /.)


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Senate black box bill could see 2015 car models ship with data recorders

ImageBlack boxes aren’t just for airplanes anymore, it seems. Though car companies have been installing the devices at their discretion since the early aughts, a new bill, ominously entitled Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century, has just passed Senate approval containing a provision that would mandate the inclusion of these Event Data Recorders in all automobiles produced from 2015 and on. Privacy fans may already be reaching for those protesting pitchforks, but keep in mind this legislation still needs to pass the House of Representatives on its way to becoming law. And given its other, more controversial elements (i.e. revoking passports for unpaid back taxes), it could still head back to the recycle bin. If it does pass Congressional muster, you’ll still have ownership of any collected data, so long as the court doesn’t require you to hand it over. Regardless of the outcome, we wouldn’t breathe a sigh of relief just yet — your car might be snooping on you as we speak. Just check your owner’s manual.

Senate black box bill could see 2015 car models ship with data recorders originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Apr 2012 13:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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FBI Seizes Server Providing Anonymous Remailer Service


sunbird writes “At 16:00 ET on April 18, federal agents seized a server located in a New York colocation facility shared by May First / People Link and Riseup.net. The server was operated by the European Counter Network (“ECN”), the oldest independent internet service provider in Europe. The server was seized as a part of the investigation into bomb threats sent via the Mixmaster anonymous remailer received by the University of Pittsburgh that were previously discussed on Slashdot. As a result of the seizure, hundreds of unrelated people and organizations have been disrupted.”


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Sprint hit with $300 million lawsuit for tax fraud in New York



Sprint has been slapped with a $300 million lawsuit by New York state for tax fraud, the NY attorney general’s office announced Thursday. The carrier allegedly submitted false records that allowed it to underpay taxes, in the interest of keeping its monthly charges low to “obtain an advantage over its competitors.”

While Sprint doesn’t top the charts for customer satisfaction, it has long offered cheaper service plans than its larger competitors: AT&T and Verizon. According to Eric Schneiderman, NY attorney general, Sprint failed to correctly collect and pay taxes on the monthly access charges its customers paid. “Sprint concluded that this practice would position its calling plans as cheaper than competitors’ plans by $4.6 million per month, collectively, because of sales taxes not collected and paid,” states the attorney general’s press release.

Schneiderman asserts that Sprint’s competitors, including Verizon, T-Mobile, and AT&T, have all managed to pay their taxes correctly. Sprint is the holdout. According to the attorney general’s math, Sprint’s underpayment of taxes is increasing by $30,000 each day.

The statement goes on to say that the lawsuit will attack Sprint for the taxes owed, not its customers. It was the company that allegedly failed to correctly collect the funds and pay the state. Reached for comment, a Sprint representative gave the following statement:

This complaint is without merit and Sprint categorically denies the complaint’s allegations. We have collected and paid over to New York every penny of sales taxes on mobile wireless services that we believe our customers owe under New York state law. With this lawsuit, the Attorney General’s office is claiming New York consumers, who already pay some of the highest wireless taxes in the country, should pay even more. We intend to stand up for New York consumers’ rights and fight this suit.

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Brammo’s 100MPH Empulse coming May 8th, spooks electrons with six-speed gearbox

Brammo's 100MPH Empulse coming May 8th, spooks electrons with six-speed gearbox

By rights, Brammo’s street-fighting Empulse should have gotten here quicker, but at least we now have a firm launch date. Sporting an all-new six-speed gearbox in place of the one-speed original, Brammo’s spec sheet shows a 121-mile city range (or 56 miles on the highway), 100+ MPH maximum hustle and a re-juicing time of 3.5 hours in fast-charge mode. We’re not sure if the price has budged from the original $14,000 estimate, but if you want to see what that ballpark sum might get you, the video after the break is all yours.

Continue reading Brammo’s 100MPH Empulse coming May 8th, spooks electrons with six-speed gearbox

Brammo’s 100MPH Empulse coming May 8th, spooks electrons with six-speed gearbox originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 13:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T Translator app hands-on: smashing the language barrier (video)

AT&T Translator app hands-on: smashing the language barrier

Translation apps aren’t exactly the newest or sexiest thing in the world of technology, but we’ve got to hand it to AT&T for whipping up a rather impressive demo. The company showed off a next-gen version of its AT&T Translator app, which may one day allow people to communicate in real time regardless of their spoken language. The app uses the carrier’s new Watson Speech API, in this case via a VoIP call on a pair of iPads, to not only transcribe dialog, but translate it from English to Spanish (and vice-versa), then play it back in the target tongue using a computer generated voice. This isn’t like the Google Translate app on your phone — the translation happens in near real time, with only a slight latency as your words are fed through the system. The demo wasn’t without its hitches (the room was noisy and filled with bloggers totting wireless devices), but it went more or less as planned, and our gracious hosts were able to complete a call requesting a taxi cab. One day AT&T hopes to make this a standard feature of its services, eliminating the language barrier once and for all. To see the app in action check out the video after the break.

Continue reading AT&T Translator app hands-on: smashing the language barrier (video)

AT&T Translator app hands-on: smashing the language barrier (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 10:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DirecTV turns on DRM, breaks peoples’ home theaters


Dave sez, “Want to watch your HBO subscription on DirecTV over HDMI? Good luck with that. Without any proactive customer outreach, DirecTV rolled out a misguided anti-piracy update last week that now requires an encrypted connection between the set-top and television to view HBO. In theory only very old HDTVs lack this ‘HDMI Copy Protection’ (HDCP). However, DirecTV’s implementation appears flaky as some newer, capable sets are also impacted and no longer able to display HBO over HDMI. DirecTV’s response to customers: switch to component cables. Which, incidentally, are easier to capture content from.”

I reached out to both HBO and DirecTV for comment. HBO indicates their copy protection policies haven’t recently changed, while DirecTV’s rep confirms a HDCP requirement for premium channels when using HDMI connections and suggests customers with older TVs switch to component cables. I’d say this is anti-consumer and a misguided approach to reducing piracy as it’s much easier to archive video traveling via an analog component connection. Unless DirecTV or HBO’s ultimate intent is to provide lower resolution 540p video over component…

What makes this move particularly offensive is, unlike Blu-ray’s analog sunset, DirecTV’s lockdown is occurring on deployed hardware – with no outreach, knowledge base articles (that I can find), and essentially breaking formerly working customer configurations. Impacted subscribers can give up HDMI for component clutter or buy new televisions. Nice?

DirecTV Blocks HBO Over HDMI (without HDCP)

(Thanks, Dave!)


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YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor

YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor

Need something to fill in the awkward silence between your vlog’s unscripted stuttering? YouTube’s got your back. In yet another attempt to make your crummy videos just a little better, the streaming outfit has revamped its audio editing suite, giving users access to over 150,000 tracks and a simple sound mixer, to boot. Sure, YouTube’s tracks may not be as catchy as your favorite Flaming Lips single, but at least you won’t have to worry about copywrite infringement. Check out YouTube’s quick demo of the feature after the break.

Continue reading YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor

YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 03:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Alienware refreshes M14x, M17x and M18x with new graphics, same old processors

Alienware refreshes M14x, M17x and M18x gaming laptops with mSATA drives, new NVIDIA graphics

Sure, they may look the same, but Alienware’s decided to give what’s going on inside its glowing gaming laptops a thorough refresh. Starting with graphics support, the 2012 update of the M14x, M17x and M18x will all be able to handle NVIDIA’s 600 series graphics with GDRR5 memory, bolstered by support for the new PCI Express 3.0 — which Alienware reckons will give double the bandwidth seen on version 2.0. Memory has been given a kick with 1600MHz dual channel memory now the base standard on all three customizable machines, starting at 6GB, up from 4GB in the older models. Capacity for the smaller M14x is locked down at 16GB of RAM, while the large M17x and M18x will be able to utilize up to 32GB. Additionally, these freshened-up models will pack Intel Core i7 processors — but it’s the Sandy Bridge kind. While an Ivy Bridge version is logically the next step, it looks like we’ll have to wait for Intel to let its new hardware out to play before we see it in these gaming laptops.

On the storage side, Alienware’s keen to trumpet new support for mSATA technology, with the new storage medium capable of acting as either a boot drive to optimize Windows or as a caching drive for improved gaming performance — we reckon the latter sounds like more fun. In fact, with the options of standard SSD, mSATA and more pedestrian storage drives, there’s up to 23 different HDD options on the M18x alone. Customization-wise, the M14x also gets the new option of a built-in Blu-ray drive. Audio hasn’t been ignored either, with Creative’s new Sound Blaster Recon3Di High-Definition hardware folded into each of the laptops, with the same built-in speakers that got the Klipsch seal of approval last time around. Overall, it looks like there should be plenty to chew over in benchmark comparisons between the 2012 update and the models it replaces. Still, we can’t shake the feeling that Alienware must be at least planning to upgrade its laptops elsewhere — perhaps its worth waiting a little bit longer.

Alienware refreshes M14x, M17x and M18x with new graphics, same old processors originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 04:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Alienware refreshes M14x, M17x and M18x with new graphics, same old processors