Get Drunk with Kaiju at This New Japanese Bar

You know kaiju, right? Those Japanese-style monsters now have their own watering hole, which serves booze and eats. There’s an important rule, though: No superheroes allowed. Don’t you dare break it! Read more…        

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Get Drunk with Kaiju at This New Japanese Bar

Google search redesign hews closer to competitor DuckDuckGo

Google’s makeover kicks the underlined URL to the curb, with a few other changes. Experiencing mild disorientation while using Google today? Google has quietly rolled out a subtle redesign for its search results that, among other things, removes the age-old hyperlink underline, bumps the font size two points, and evens out the line spacing. Google search results have gotten incremental changes over the years, and the search page certainly no longer looks like it did when the site first launched. Jon Wiley, the lead designer for Google search, took to Google+ Wednesday to say that the new look “improves readability and creates an overall cleaner look.” Having gone nearly a decade without underlined hyperlinks, we here at Ars wholeheartedly agree with the decision. The redesign moves Google up and away from competitors like Yahoo and Bing , which preserve the underline. However, it only catches Google up to the upstart DuckDuckGo, which does not use underlines and is cleaner still on its search results page, with truncated URLs for each result. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Google search redesign hews closer to competitor DuckDuckGo

Samsung Galaxy back-door allows for over-the-air filesystem access

Developers from the Replicant project (a free Android offshoot) have documented a serious software back-door in Samsung’s Android phones , which “provides remote access to the data stored on the device.” They believe it is “likely” that the backdoor could provide “over-the-air remote control” to “access the phone’s file system.” At issue is Samsung’s proprietary IPC protocol, used in its modems. This protocol implements a set of commands called “RFS commands.” The Replicant team says that it can’t find “any particular legitimacy nor relevant use-case” for adding these commands, but adds that “it is possible that these were added for legitimate purposes, without the intent of doing harm by providing a back-door. Nevertheless, the result is the same and it allows the modem to access the phone’s storage.” The Replicant site includes proof-of-concept sourcecode for a program that will access the file-system over the modem. Replicant has created a replacement for the relevant Samsung software that does not allow for back-door access. Samsung Galaxy devices running proprietary Android versions come with a back-door that provides remote access to the data stored on the device. In particular, the proprietary software that is in charge of handling the communications with the modem, using the Samsung IPC protocol, implements a class of requests known as RFS commands, that allows the modem to perform remote I/O operations on the phone’s storage. As the modem is running proprietary software, it is likely that it offers over-the-air remote control, that could then be used to issue the incriminated RFS messages and access the phone’s file system. …The incriminated RFS messages of the Samsung IPC protocol were not found to have any particular legitimacy nor relevant use-case. However, it is possible that these were added for legitimate purposes, without the intent of doing harm by providing a back-door. Nevertheless, the result is the same and it allows the modem to access the phone’s storage. However, some RFS messages of the Samsung IPC protocol are legitimate (IPC_RFS_NV_READ_ITEM and IPC_RFS_NV_WRITE_ITEM) as they target a very precise file, known as the modem’s NV data. There should be no particular security concern about these as both the proprietary implementation and its free software replacement strictly limit actions to that particular file. Samsung Galaxy Back-door        

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Samsung Galaxy back-door allows for over-the-air filesystem access

Amazon raising Prime subscriptions by $20 to $99 a year

We suspected a price rise was imminent for Prime subscribers in the US, especially after recent changes in the UK, and now we have the details. When you sign up or renew, you’ll be charged an annual rate of $99, versus the steady $79 charge that has been in place since the service first launched. An email to Prime members vaguely attributes the increase to rising fuel and transportation costs, as well as to the general expansion of streaming content and e-book lending. There’s a get-out clause if you’re quick, however: New subscribers who sign up for the free trial within the next seven days, will be able to lock in the old price for a year. Beyond that, there’s no good news except that the increase wasn’t larger. In what could turn out to be a clever bit of expectation management, Amazon had previously warned that it could raise the subscription by as much as $40. Filed under: Misc , Internet , Amazon Comments Via: CNBC [Twitter]

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Amazon raising Prime subscriptions by $20 to $99 a year

Mozilla strives to take Web gaming to the next level with Unreal Engine 4

Around this time last year Mozilla and Epic Games showed off the Unreal 3 game engine running in the browser, using a combination of the WebGL 3D graphics API and asm.js , the high performance subset of JavaScript. Commercial games built using this technology were launched late in the year. With this apparently successful foray into using the browser as a rich gaming platform, Mozilla and Epic today demonstrated a preview of Epic’s next engine, Unreal Engine 4, again boasting near-native speeds. The Web version of UE4 uses Emscripten to compile regular C and C++ code into asm.js. Unreal Engine 4 running within Firefox. Over the past year, Mozilla has improved asm.js’s performance, to go from around 40 percent of native performance, to something like 67 percent of native. Our own testing largely supported the organization’s claims, though we noted certain limitations at the time, such as JavaScript’s lack of multithreading. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Mozilla strives to take Web gaming to the next level with Unreal Engine 4

This list is brought to you by 25 years of the world wide web

When Tim Berners-Lee penned a memo to his boss at CERN in March 1989, he was looking for a better way to manage information about complex evolving systems. He proposed an interconnected network of information that would improve communication at the facility, but there was no way of knowing what a tangled web we would weave. That memo would eventually spawn the world wide web and the various memes, crowdfunded gadgets and user-generated porn sites that it made possible. Hell, you wouldn’t be reading Engadget if it weren’t for Sir Berners-Lee. In homage to that great network of information that we all know and surf today, we present you with 25 things made possible by the big ole’ W3. 1. Keyboard an4rchy Freedom is a good thing. Until it’s applied to the rules of grammar. So if you downloaded some sw337 warez? Or ju5t pwnd some dude on Counter-Strike ? Why not l3t teh w0r1d kn0w about it in teh m057 ann0y1ng w4y p0551bl3. Sure, leet/1337/l33t speak predates Berners-Lee’s invention, but the good, old World Wide Web was the platform it had been waiting for. 2. Anonymous: Power to the people From l337 h4x0r to, well… elite hackers. Or hacktivists in the case of rebel group, Anonymous. The nebulous organization has no set form or motivation, but is best known for its very public shaming of corporate entities such as the RIAA and MPAA over the world wide web, or its defense of The Pirate Bay . As for its largest contribution to popular culture? Either the popularization of Guy Fawkes (or V for Vendetta , depending on whom you ask) masks, or the reminder to the suits that there’s power in numbers. You decide. 3. Tesla: Advances in the electric car Hang on, wasn’t this a list about what’s only possible thanks to the web? Yes, it is, and still is. Electric cars didn’t come to us via the internet, but Elon Musk — head honcho of Tesla — arguably did. Musk co-founded X.com , which ultimately became PayPal . The success of this (and other online ventures) lead to Musk’s disruption of the EV market with Tesla. We just wish we had enough money in our PayPal accounts to buy a Model S. 4. Crowdfunding: Veronica Mars lives on It may seem like a fogy, old buzzword now, but crowdfunding is an everyday part of the web. Its crowned monarch? That’d be Kickstarter . The website has birthed everything from the useful to the bizarre , but it was the reinvention of axed series Veronica Mars as a fan-funded feature film that truly signaled crowdfunding’s cultural coming of age. You’ve already ordered your ticket , right? 5. GIFs Divided by the pronunciation; united by their message. 6. Getting over stranger danger It sounds like a recipe for disaster: You go to a stranger’s house, and pay them to not harm sleep on their floor, couch, left-hand side. Or, maybe, you try and make a few bucks driving around complete unknowns in your hatchback. But hey, the world’s not always the terrible place we think it is, and thanks to services like Airbnb , Craigslist , UberX and CouchSurfing, the whole thing kinda works. What goes on during rented time, however, is between consenting adults . 7. The cult of Fail ) There’s a silent, yet collective gratitude held among the clumsy, dumb and just plain unfortunate, who grew up before the proliferation of smartphones and the web. The video above explains why. 8. Live animal streams But for every fail in the universe, there’s probably a live video feed of kittens to balance it out. Web karma? 9. Cats: a love story Did someone say kitten? The world wide web has, for some reason, a bit of a thing for cats. Not only are there live-cams showing them, they have also become something of their own web cult, complete with its own language . Oh, and of course memes . So many memes . 10. Memes And speaking of memes! While technically not enabled by, or created only on the internet, the web is their spiritual home. The ability to share easily and the office-bound netizens’ appetite for distraction have made the web a fertile breeding ground for these short-lived, but culturally telling creations. Of course, there are way, way too many to cover here. But there were a couple that immediately sprung to the minds of our editors when asked for their favorites. We expect to see yours in the comments. 11. A world of opportunity While for some the internet is a way to kill time, for others it’s an opportunity — perhaps to make some quick, clever cash . Or maybe get your little side-project website optioned for a movie . Or, you know, trade up from a paper clip to a house . 12. Making something of yourself It’s hard to be apathetic toward pop juggernaut Justin Bieber. Generally, people express either guttural hatred for the young Canadian, or worship him as a modern deity, spending every waking hour trawling for gossip or staring at his Twitter feed praying for an update. (Not that we have any personal experience ). In a roundabout way, the Biebs as we know him was created by the www, or more specifically, YouTube . After all, it was covers posted on the site that got him noticed, begat a record contract and well, you know the rest. Thanks, world wide web. No, really . 13. Connecting with people, places and things Pretty much since the first-ever “www” was typed into a browser, people have used the world wide web to connect with one another. In the early days, this would likely have been for academic purposes . Then to discuss shared interests , exchange memes , trade music, rekindle old flames and catch up with school pals. What the world wide web enabled was the ability to do all that with rich media, fancy profiles and all that other good stuff. And who knows, if you’re lucky, you might find someone to share an Airbnb room with. 14. Playing detective Steve Fossett had a taste for adventure. Be it solo balloon flights around the globe, sailing expeditions or piloting fixed-wing aircraft. In September 2007, Fossett went missing during a flight over the Great Basin Desert in Nevada. After an initial search proved fruitless, the hunt turned to the web . Google had very recently updated its Maps imagery for the area, and there was a very real chance that Fossett’s craft could have been captured in the process. Netizens logged on in an attempt to try find anything that might lead to Fossett’s whereabouts. By February the following year, sadly, nothing had shown up either online, or out in the desert, and the hunt was called off. Several months later, a hiker discovered some of Fossett’s possessions, and remains that would later be confirmed as his, finally closing the case. 15. Selling or buying anything Sometimes there are things that exist peacefully in their own right, but just need the world wide web to come along and, well, jazz it up a little. Auctions have been taking place for centuries, but it wasn’t until the magic of the hypertext transfer protocol that we could have sites like eBay, and thus the ability to sell anything . Such as a fairy corpse . A Batmobile . Or water, (but not the cup) that has touched the lips of Elvis . Oh, and somewhat predictably , your innocence . 16. The attack of the blogs If you’ve got something to say — or to be fair, even if you really don’t — the good ole’ web is probably where you want to be heading. Weblogs are a www mainstay and well, at Engadget, who are we to argue with their excellence as a medium for sharing wit and knowledge? The true beating heart of blogs, and blogging, however, lies with the individual. The army of authors tirelessly turning out words of wisdom, gossip or revealing a secret, second life . 17. Never giving you up Rick Astley shot to fame in the late 1980s with his global hit, “Never Gonna Give You Up.” Despite a long, successful musical career, he’s best known — as far as the internet is concerned — for being an unwitting conspirator in the world wide web plague known as Rickrolling . A “bait and switch” meme said to trace back to 2007 , Astley’s music video for “Never Gonna Give You Up” was the destination for around 53 percent of hyperlinks a short time after according to at least one source . He was soon hiding behind the first 10 seconds of every YouTube clip, and even tricked serious students into defacing their work for his amusement. (Talking in the past tense tends to keep him from flaring up again). It’s a magical video, though… gotta give him that (but never up). 18. Fan fiction Some stories are just too big for the limits of one author. Or, at least that’s what a whole bunch of eager fans on the web think. That’s the conclusion we must draw from the proliferation of fan fiction that the web encouraged. It’s not all sleazy Harry Potter re-writes though. Some of it’s sleazy Twilight re-writes too. There are those who might be tempted to say it’s a niche outlet that will never catch on. Those people would be one shade of wrong . 19. Tracking your snack Waiting around for food? Ain’t nobody got time for that . But thanks to the web, hard-working chefs and a vast network of GPS satellites and fiber-optic cables, you can see how far out your Cali Chicken Bacon Ranch is from your doorstep — 25 years of progress, not entirely wasted. 20. The death of idle moments Sure, the new way to waste time might be your favorite Flappy Bird clone, but back in the heyday (OK, that’s technically still now), it was all about clubbing penguins , or our desk-lunch favorite, of course, spanking the monkey . 21. The serious matter of satire Before the web, news spread at a much more leisurely pace, crossing cultural borders only when it needed to. We also had fewer outlets to choose from, making accountability much easier. Not anymore. The world wide web, as the name suggests, is a global tangle of potential misinformation. If you pour a healthy stream of satire into the flow, it’s only a matter of time until it finds itself in the same wash cycle as “real” news, like a red sock in with your whites. Top satire site The Onion has been taken seriously on way more occasions than we’re comfortable with. Then there was that time Sesame Street’s Bert got caught up in political protest . 22. Fake becoming the new real We guess it’s hardly a surprise that if you gift the planet with a rich medium that can be accessed from (and added to) the privacy of your own home, that it won’t be long before people start making stuff up. That’s fine, until it’s not. At the level of the individual, at worst it’s just a bit tragic . But what if this kind of hoodwinkery gets into more monied hands? Things get a little weirder/more sinister. From lonelygirl15 , to equine e-books , to Wii Fit girl (and its backlash ), it seems everyone wants to be someone else on the world wide web. 23. Digitizing books one registration form at a time It’s rare to find something as wonderfully perfect as the reCAPTCHA project. You likely know it as that annoying test of your humanity that requires you to read some badly mangled words, and type them into a form. But, not only is this a necessary evil used to keep bots and other web-nasties from creating fake accounts and orders, it’s also an ingenious way of digitizing books. What the what? Yes, those 10 seconds you spend aren’t entirely wasted, as usually one of the words you type is actually a word from a digitized book that wasn’t recognized. After it’s been presented to a few different humans, its meaning is confirmed, and the book is one step closer to being converted. With about 200 million CAPTCHAs being solved every single day, however, these small efforts quickly add up to significant work. World wide web? More like win win win. 24. Citizen journalism It’s easy to look at this list (or just spend five minutes online) and assume that the web is a tool wasted on the public. But the very real, and truly global impact of the W3 is not to be underestimated. The humble http has given the world a set of tools that allow real-time reporting by the public. Whether it’s revolution in the Middle East , Occupy Wall Street or unrest in the Ukraine, web platforms like Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and YouTube have been appropriated by have-a-go journalists with a story to tell. Conventional media is far from out of a job, but the web has added another news channel previously inaccessible to the mainstream 25. This post The world has always loved a good list, but the internet has brought our passion to new heights. If we’ve learned anything over the last 25 years, it’s that nothing in this world can’t be boiled down to a collection of pithy bullet points and clever images. Jamie Rigg and Christopher Trout contributed to this feature. Filed under: Internet Comments

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This list is brought to you by 25 years of the world wide web

An Ultra-Flat Air Conditioner That Could Be Mistaken For Artwork

Those living in apartments or homes without central air have to come to terms with ugly, boxy air conditioners hanging out their windows. It’s either that, or be roasted alive in the summer. But it doesn’t have to be that way, not when LG is somehow packing air conditioners into these ultra-slim housings that hang on your wall like artwork. Read more…        

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An Ultra-Flat Air Conditioner That Could Be Mistaken For Artwork

NSA’s automated hacking engine offers hands-free pwning of the world

Since 2010, the National Security Agency has kept a push-button hacking system called Turbine that allows the agency to scale up the number of networks it has access to from hundreds to potentially millions. The news comes from new Edward Snowden documents published by Ryan Gallagher and Glenn Greenwald in The Intercept today. The leaked information details how the NSA has used Turbine to ramp up its hacking capacity to “industrial scale,” plant malware that breaks the security on virtual private networks (VPNs) and digital voice communications, and collect data and subvert targeted networks on a once-unimaginable scale. Turbine is part of Turbulence, the collection of systems that also includes the Turmoil network surveillance system that feeds the NSA’s XKeyscore surveillance database. While it is controlled from NSA and GCHQ headquarters, it is a distributed set of attack systems equipped with packaged “exploits” that take advantage of the ability the NSA and GCHQ have to insert themselves as a “man in the middle” at Internet chokepoints. Using that position of power, Turbine can automate functions of Turbulence systems to corrupt data in transit between two Internet addresses, adding malware to webpages being viewed or otherwise attacking the communications stream. Since Turbine went online in 2010, it has allowed the NSA to scale up from managing hundreds of hacking operations each day to handling millions of them. It does so by taking people out of the loop of managing attacks, instead using software to identify, target, and attack Internet-connected devices by installing malware referred to as “implants.” According to the documents, NSA analysts can simply specify the type of information required and let the system figure out how to get to it without having to know the details of the application being attacked. Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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NSA’s automated hacking engine offers hands-free pwning of the world

Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry – To Shut It Down

cartechboy writes “What’s $50 billion among friends, right? At least Felix Kramer and Gil Friend are thinking big, so there is that. The pair have published an somewhat audacious proposal to spend $50 billion dollars to buy up and then shut down every single private and public coal company operating in the United States. The scientific benefits: eliminating acid rain, airborne emissions, etc). The shutdown proposal includes the costs of retraining for the approximately 87, 000 coal-industry workers who would lose their jobs over the proposed 10-year phaseout of coal. Since Kramer and Friend don’t have $50 billion, they suggest the concept could be funded as a public service and if governments can’t do it maybe some rich guys can — and the names Gates, Buffett and Bloomberg come up. Any takers?” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Environmentalists Propose $50 Billion Buyout of Coal Industry – To Shut It Down

Welcome to The World’s Largest Ghost City: Ordos, China

Built for over a million people, the city of Ordos was designed to be the crowning glory of Inner Mongolia. Doomed to incompletion however, this futuristic metropolis now rises empty out of the deserts of northern China. Only 2% of its buildings were ever filled; the rest has largely been left to decay, abandoned mid-construction, earning Ordos the title of China’s Ghost City . Read more…        

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Welcome to The World’s Largest Ghost City: Ordos, China