The NSA Monitors 1.6% of the World’s Internet Traffic

To be slightly more transparent and/or spew numbers to confuse the common citizen, the Obama administration released two documents to show the scope of the NSA’s data collection program. Those documents reveal that the NSA monitors 1.6% of the world’s Internet traffic and reviews .00004% of all traffic. Read more…        

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The NSA Monitors 1.6% of the World’s Internet Traffic

NSA firing 90% of its sysadmins to eliminate potential Snowdens

The NSA is to cut 90% of its 1, 000 sysadmins in a bid to reduce the risk of leaks. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden was a network administrator, charged with keeping the machines running on the network of vast data-centers used by the NSA to harvest, store and analyze unimaginably large quantities of data.        

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NSA firing 90% of its sysadmins to eliminate potential Snowdens

SATA 3.2 standard finalized, promises faster and smaller storage

There’s no doubt that Serial ATA storage is hitting a wall when even mainstream PCs like the MacBook Air and VAIO Pro use the PCI Express interface to get around performance bottlenecks. It’s a good thing that SATA-IO just ratified the improved SATA 3.2 specification, then. The new standard centers on SATA Express , which lets SATA storage ride on the PCIe bus and more than doubles the available bandwidth to 16Gbps (2GB/s). Version 3.2 also brings support for the M.2 format , giving Ultrabooks and tablets access to SATA Express in a tiny form factor. We’re already getting a peek at what the new spec can do when M.2-based PCIe drives offer comparable performance, but SATA 3.2’s ratification should bring that kind of speed to many more PCs in the future. Filed under: Storage Comments Source: SATA-IO

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SATA 3.2 standard finalized, promises faster and smaller storage

FBI director calls on private sector to man up, help with cyber threat

Robert Mueller, FBI Director, says Keith and John are his BFFs. FBI FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, CIA Director John Brennan, and National Security Agency (NSA) Director Gen. Keith Alexander shared the stage on August 8 at the International Conference on Cyber Security  (ICCS), an event cohosted by the FBI and Fordham University in New York. The three spoke on a panel about the future of cybersecurity. Mueller spoke about the Lulzec case and how the FBI caught Hector “Sabu” Monsegur , along with how it will deal with increasingly sophisticated hackers and cybercriminals. Key to the bureau’s success, he said, was “focusing on the individuals behind the keyboards”—with the help of the NSA, CIA, and private industry. “I do believe that in the future, the cyber threat will equal or even eclipse the terrorist threat, ” Mueller said in his opening remarks. “And just as partnerships have enabled us to address the terrorist threat, partnerships will enable us to address the cyber threat. But the array of partners critical to defeating the cyber threat is different. In this case, the private sector is the essential partner.” Getting into hackers’ heads “In the years to come, we will encounter new intrusion methods, hacking techniques, and other unpleasant surprises, ” Mueller said in his prepared remarks for the panel. “And in response, our nation will continue to develop—as we must—the technical skills and tools to prevent these intrusions and limit their damage.” Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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FBI director calls on private sector to man up, help with cyber threat

Roku’s updated iOS app now lets you stream video directly from your iPhone to its set-top boxes.

Roku’s updated iOS app now lets you stream video directly from your iPhone to its set-top boxes. Which is neat. Read more…        

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Roku’s updated iOS app now lets you stream video directly from your iPhone to its set-top boxes.

4-Billion-Year-Old Fossil Protein Resurrected

First time accepted submitter Zoë Mintz writes “Researchers have ‘resurrected’ a 4-billion-year-old Precambrian protein and found they resembled those that existed when life began, proving that protein structures have the ability to remain constant over extended periods of time.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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4-Billion-Year-Old Fossil Protein Resurrected

Silent Circle follows Lavabit’s example, shuts down its secure email service

Silent Circle’s thing has always been the promise of end-to-end secure communications , and that drive is apparently causing it to shut down the Silent Mail email service. Reasons cited in a blog post by CTO Jon Callas include the insecure nature of email protocols and preemptively avoiding the outside (read: FISA ) pressures that prompted Lavabit to close its doors . Silent Circle says it hadn’t received any “subpoenas, warrants, security letters, or anything else”. Still, CEO Michael Janke tells TechCrunch he believed the government would come knocking due to certain high profile users of the service. Its phone, video and text products remain operational and claim to be “secure as ever”, if you’re wondering. Filed under: Internet Comments Source: Silent Circle

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Silent Circle follows Lavabit’s example, shuts down its secure email service

This Leaked iPad Display Shows What the Next iPad Might Look Like

It’s that time of the year again! When next iPhones and next iPads magically manifest themselves through supply chain leaks and third party dealers. This time, the leak shows what could be the display for the next iPad. If real, it shows that the next full-sized iPad will have a super thin bezel just like the iPad Mini. Read more…        

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This Leaked iPad Display Shows What the Next iPad Might Look Like

inWatch One smartwatch has GSM connectivity and a heavily skinned version of Android

From Kickstarter projects to rumored devices from the biggest gadget manufacturers on earth, smartwatches of all kinds are popping up all over the world. The latest such wearable was unearthed by our good friends at Engadget Chinese , and is called inWatch One. It sets itself apart from other smartwatches with a custom version of Android 4.0 and a GSM SIM card slot to give your wrist access to mobile voice and data networks. inWatch has a 1.54-inch 240 x 240 capacitive display, a dual-core 1.2GHz CPU of unknown origin, a 2-megapixel camera and a 500mAh battery. Connectivity comes courtesy of the aforementioned GSM (likely for China-friendly 900/1800/2100 MHz bands), WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS radios. As for that custom Android build, dubbed inDroid, its been tailored to fit the watch’s smaller screen and works with some of China’s most popular apps; WeChat, Sina Weibo, QQ and Baidu music are all supported. Interested? It’s available now on the company’s website for RMB 1, 788 million (about $293 US). Filed under: Wearables , Mobile Comments Via: Engadget Chinese Source: inWatch (Chinese)

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inWatch One smartwatch has GSM connectivity and a heavily skinned version of Android

NVIDIA CEO: ‘We’re going to bring it with the second generation Surface’

NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang has confirmed to CNET that a followup to the Surface RT is in development, and that it will apparently continue to use NVIDIA hardware inside. Recently news concerning the ARM-powered version of Microsoft’s tablet hasn’t been good, with a $900 million inventory charge and price cuts for both the RT and Pro . According to Jen-Hsun Huang, the addition of an Outlook mail app in Windows 8.1 can be the killer app the platform has been missing, and the company hopes it will be a big success. Rumors for the next gen of Surface have hinted at Microsoft offering Qualcomm chips in some models as well a smaller 7-inch version . NVIDIA may have some Tegra 4-specific features to contribute on the latter, we’ll see if its can take a bigger bite out of the tablet market on their second attempt. Filed under: Tablets , Microsoft Comments Source: CNET

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NVIDIA CEO: ‘We’re going to bring it with the second generation Surface’