And now, Monty Python’s John Cleese on the origins of creativity [Video]

This lecture may be from 1991, but the topic is timeless, the discussion is lucid, and it’s all delivered by Basil Fawlty himself. Here’s 36 minutes of John Cleese discussing the psychology of being creative. Listen to one of the funniest fellows alive talk seriously about how to become more creative, how to spitball ideas with others, and the benefits of building a “space-time oasis.” Comedy sketches about dead parrots don’t grow on trees, after all. More »

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And now, Monty Python’s John Cleese on the origins of creativity [Video]

McAfee Claims Successful Insulin Pump Attack


judgecorp writes “Intel security subsidiary McAfee has claimed a successful wireless attack on insulin pumps that diabetics rely on to control blood sugar. While previous attempts to attack insulin pumps have met with mixed success, McAfee’s Barnaby Jack says he has persuaded an insulin pump to deliver 45 days worth of insulin in one go, without triggering the pump’s vibrating alert safety feature. All security experts still say that surgical implants are a benefit overall.”


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McAfee Claims Successful Insulin Pump Attack

Google Chrome 19 beta brings live tab synching to the fold

Google Chrome 19 beta brings live tab synching to the fold

You know the score. You’ve stepped away from your desktop, and then you think to yourself, “Damn. If only I could remember that website I’d just visited.” Now, users of Google Chrome’s latest beta will no longer have that worry. The latest incarnation of Google’s web browser gives users immediate access to all of their tabs, across all devices, which can be found within the new tab window. Here, users will discover an “Other devices” menu that gives quick and easy access to all those sites you just visited — yet for the life of you, can’t seem to remember. According to Google, beta users will see this feature gradually roll out over the coming week. Not a moment too soon, either.

Google Chrome 19 beta brings live tab synching to the fold originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Apr 2012 15:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome 19 beta brings live tab synching to the fold

Iran moving ahead with plans for national intranet



Iran topped a recent list of repressive regimes that most aggressively restrict Internet freedom. The list, published by Reporters Without Borders, is a part of the 2012 edition of the organization’s Enemies of the Internet report. One of the details addressed in that report is the Iranian government’s bizarre plan to create its own “clean” Internet. The proposed system, an insular nationwide intranet that is reportedly isolated from the regular Internet, would be heavily regulated by the government.

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Iran moving ahead with plans for national intranet

Kingston HyperX 3K SSD review round-up: Cheaper than its predecessor and almost as good

Kingston HyperX 3K SSD review round-up: Cheaper than its predecessor and almost as good

Kingston’s new HyperX 3K SSD has appeared, powered by a second-generation SandForce SF-2281 processor. Sizes ranging from 90GB to 480GB and are appropriately priced between $140 to $700 — depending on your storage tastes. With a SATA 6Gb/s interface wrapped in a black and aluminum casing, the HyperX 3K looks ready to spar with Intel’s similarly SandForce-powered SSDs. Kingston’s 2.5-inch drives have also finished the review party circuit, picking up some pretty positive responses. According to Anandtech‘s testing, the HyperX 3K performs almost as well as its 5K predecessor, landing just behind it for light workload tests (309.4 MB/s on average) and a heavy workload performance (225.8 MB/s) that netted it second place. Overall, they reckon the HyperX 3K is a “no-brainer,” offering great performance for less of those hard-earned dollars.

The relatively rugged design was the first thing that caught Storage Review’s eye, due to Kingston’s (presumably necessary) thermal armor. The site was suitably impressed by read rates, which were comparable to the original HyperX SSD. Write performance didn’t hold up quite as well during tests and due to the reduced quality of the NAND memory used, you will see a drop on total write cycles possible — something that mainstream users probably won’t lose much sleep over. Storage Review maintains that when it comes to both performance and pricing, Kingston’s latest “delivers on both fronts.” You can take a closer look at what both reviews have to say — and a whole load of tests — at the sources below.

Kingston HyperX 3K SSD review round-up: Cheaper than its predecessor and almost as good originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Apr 2012 10:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kingston HyperX 3K SSD review round-up: Cheaper than its predecessor and almost as good

Unraveling a baroque, snarled, multimillion-dollar porn-ad clickfraud scam


Panos Ipeirotis, who writes the aptly named “A Computer Scientist in a Business School” blog, describes how he made national news by unraveling a multimillion-dollar “clickfraud” enterprise that used hidden frames, pornographic traffic brokerages, clever misdirection and obfuscation techniques, traffic laundering, skimmed traffic, and other techniques from the shadier side of the Internet’s ad-supported ecosystem to extract anywhere from $400K to $5M to date. The monetary losers were pornographic sites, but a number of high-profile “legit” sites were implicated, unwittingly used as “laundries” for the traffic. The scheme itself is awfully baroque, and Ipeirotis does an admirable job of laying it out, while introducing all these marvelously weird terms describing the modern practices of Internet grifters.

At this point, we now know how this person makes money. Clearly, there is click-fraud: the scammer is employing click-fraud services to click on the pay-per-click ads “displayed” in his parked domains. If some of the ads are also pay-per-impression, he may also get paid for these invisible impressions that happen within the 0x0 iframe.

Why the parked domains though? Why not doing the same directly within the porn site? The answer is simple: Traffic laundering.

What do I mean by “traffic laundering”? First, the ad networks are unlikely to place many ads within a porn site. On the other hand, they have ad-placement services for parked domains. Second, the publishers that get the traffic from the parked domains see in the referral URLs some legitimately-sounding domain names, not a porn site. Even if they go and check the site, they will only see an empty site full of ads. Nothing too suspicious. Hats off to the scammer. Clever scheme.

You think we are done? No. There is one more piece in the puzzle. How does the scammer attract visitors to the porn site?

The other interesting part: The porn website does not really contain porn! There are a few images but most of the links are to other porn website that actually host the video. In other words, the scammer does not even pay the cost of hosting porn!

Uncovering an advertising fraud scheme. Or “the Internet is for porn” (Thanks, Fipi Lele!)


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Unraveling a baroque, snarled, multimillion-dollar porn-ad clickfraud scam

Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo lets you draw something on tablets and paper

Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo, lets you draw something on tablets and paper

Tired of reaching for the stylus, then your pen, oh, and then the stylus again? Wacom saw that, and updated the Bamboo Stylus with the new “Duo.” Half pen, half stylus, and all yours for £34 (about $50) next month.

Continue reading Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo lets you draw something on tablets and paper

Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo lets you draw something on tablets and paper originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Apr 2012 07:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba intros Qosmio X875 gaming laptop with Ivy Bridge, fairly tame digs

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In case it wasn’t clear, Toshiba’s overhauling its entire consumer lineup for the back-to-school season, and that includes its lone gaming rig. The 17.3-inch Qosmio X875 replaces last year’s X775, ushering in Ivy Bridge and that same reined-in design we we’ve seen in recent photos. Though Toshiba’s remaining fairly mum on specs (we bet this has something to do with not wanting to steal Intel’s thunder), we can confirm it packs “third-generation” Intel Core processors, NVIDIA GTX 670M graphics with 3GB of video memory, dual hard drive bays, quad Harman Kardon speakers and four memory slots, with up to 16GB of RAM on board out of the box. The resolution can be either 1600 x 900 or 1080p, with that latter pixel count only available on the 3D model. As you can see in the photos, Toshiba’s moved to a subtler aluminum aesthetic it’s calling Black Widow, but what you can’t tell from that vantage point is that this guy is 25 percent thinner than its predecessor. In case you needed more proof this is an Ivy Bridge machine, note the release date: this beastly fellow won’t be available until June 24th. At that point, it’ll start at $1,299, though the highest-end configuration will set you back a cool $2,499. That’s more than two months away, of course, so for now you’ll have to content yourselves with our teaser shots below.

Continue reading Toshiba intros Qosmio X875 gaming laptop with Ivy Bridge, fairly tame digs

Toshiba intros Qosmio X875 gaming laptop with Ivy Bridge, fairly tame digs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Apr 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba intros Qosmio X875 gaming laptop with Ivy Bridge, fairly tame digs

Medicaid Hack Update: 500,000 Records and 280,000 SSNs Stolen


An anonymous reader writes “Utah’s Medicaid hack estimate has grown a second time. This time we have gone from over 180,000 Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Plan (CHIP) recipients having their personal information stolen to a grand total of 780,000. More specifically, the state now says approximately 500,000 victims had sensitive personal information stolen and 280,000 victims had their Social Security numbers (SSNs) compromised.”


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Medicaid Hack Update: 500,000 Records and 280,000 SSNs Stolen

Iran plans to unplug the Internet, launch its own “clean” alternative



Iran topped a recent list of repressive regimes that most aggressively restrict Internet freedom. The list, published by Reporters Without Borders, is a part of the 2012 edition of the organization’s Enemies of the Internet report.

One of the details addressed in that report is the Iranian government’s bizarre plan to create its own “clean” Internet. The proposed system, an insular nation-wide intranet that is isolated from the regular Internet, will be heavily regulated by the government. According to a report published today by the International Business Times, Iranian government officials have announced that the new system will be ready to deploy within five months.

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Iran plans to unplug the Internet, launch its own “clean” alternative