Century-Old Time Capsule Mystery Finally Solved

Last year, a church congregation in Grand Ledge, Michigan cracked open a time capsule from 1912 filled with all the usual suspects: photos, newspapers, and newsletters. Basically, it had all the boring stuff you’d expect a church to put in their time capsule in 1912. But there was one single mystery item: a neat little package wrapped in brown paper . It was quite the puzzler. Until now. Read more…

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Century-Old Time Capsule Mystery Finally Solved

Microsoft has won the right to disclose the FBI’s demand for information about Office 365 customer–

Microsoft has won the right to disclose the FBI’s demand for information about Office 365 customer—a pretty significant victory for transparency and free speech. Read more…

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Microsoft has won the right to disclose the FBI’s demand for information about Office 365 customer–

Four Weeks Without Soap Or Shampoo

An anonymous reader writes “A biotech start-up from Massachusetts has an unusual product: a bottle full of bacteria you’re supposed to spray onto your face. The bacteria is Nitrosomonas eutropha, and it’s generally harmless. Its main use is that it oxidizes ammonia, and the start-up’s researchers suspect it used to commonly live on human skin before we began washing it away with soaps and other cleaners. Such bacteria are an area of heavy research in biology right now. Scientists know that the gut microbiome is important to proper digestion, and they’re trying to figure out if an external microbiome can be similarly beneficial to skin. A journalist for the NY Times volunteered to test the product, which involved four straight weeks of no showers, no soap, no shampoo, and no deodorant. The sprayed-on bacteria quickly colonized her skin, along with other known types of bacteria — and hundreds of unknown (but apparently harmless) strains. She reported improvements to her skin and complexion, and described how the bacteria worked to curtail (but not eliminate) the body odor caused by not washing. At the end of the experiment, all of the N. eutropha vanished within three showers.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Four Weeks Without Soap Or Shampoo

Google Overtakes Apple As the World’s Most Valuable Brand

mrspoonsi (2955715) writes in with news that global market research agency Millward Brown has proclaimed Google as the world’s most valuable brand. “US search engine Google has overtaken rival technology titan Apple as the world’s top brand in terms of value, global market research agency Millward Brown said Wednesday. Google’s brand value shot up 40 percent in a year to $158.84 billion (115 billion euros), Millward Brown said in its 2014 100 Top BrandZ report. ‘Google has been extremely innovative this year with Google Glass, investments in artificial intelligence and a range of partnerships, ‘ said Benoit Tranzer, the head of Millward Brown France. Apple, which dominated the top position for three straight years, saw its brand value fall by 20 percent to $147.88 billion.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Google Overtakes Apple As the World’s Most Valuable Brand

IT Pro Gets Prison Time For Sabotaging Ex-Employer’s System

itwbennett writes: “In June 2012, Ricky Joe Mitchell of Charleston, West Virginia, found out he was going to be fired from oil and gas company EnerVest and in response he decided to reset the company’s servers to their original factory settings. He also disabled cooling equipment for EnerVest’s systems and disabled a data-replication process. After pleading guilty in January, Mitchell has been sentenced to four years in federal prison.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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IT Pro Gets Prison Time For Sabotaging Ex-Employer’s System

Chrome 35 Launches With New APIs and JavaScript Features

An anonymous reader writes “Google today released Chrome version 35 for Windows, Mac, Linux, and Android. The new version is mainly for developers, especially those building Web content and apps for mobile devices – this release doesn’t appear to have any new features targeted at the end user. ” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Chrome 35 Launches With New APIs and JavaScript Features

How the Colorado River Finally Reached the Sea Again

This week, for the first time in decades, the Colorado River flowed to its natural end in the Gulf of California. But it was the opposite of a natural event. The artificially engineered “pulse flow” that pushed the waters all the way to the Gulf required an unprecedented collaboration between the U.S. and Mexico, wading into a complex body of laws around a basic question: to whom does a river belong? Read more…

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How the Colorado River Finally Reached the Sea Again

Almost 100 Arrested In Worldwide Swoop On Blackshades Malware

MattSparkes (950531) writes “Law enforcement around the world has teamed-up to arrest 97 for buying/using Blackshades malware, which can remotely seize control of a victim’s computer, access documents, record keystrokes and even activate their webcam to take surreptitious pictures and video. It is also able to encrypt files in order to extract a ransom for their release. Blackshades RAT is a commercial product costing less than $200 which was marketed as a tool to test network security. However, it is widely used by hackers and was even said by the Electronic Frontier Foundation to have been used against Syrian activists by the government in 2012.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Almost 100 Arrested In Worldwide Swoop On Blackshades Malware

Cisco Complains To Obama About NSA Adding Spyware To Routers

pdclarry (175918) writes “Glenn Greenwald’s book No Place to Hide reveals that the NSA intercepts shipments of networking gear destined for overseas and adds spyware. Cisco has responded by asking the President to intervene and stop this practice, as it has severely hurt their non-US business, with shipments to other countries falling from 7% for emerging countries to over 25% for Brazil and Russia.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Cisco Complains To Obama About NSA Adding Spyware To Routers

Malvertising Up By Over 200%

An anonymous reader writes “Online Trust Alliance (OTA) Executive Director and President Craig Spiezle testified before the U.S. Senate’s Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, outlining the risks of malicious advertising, and possible solutions to stem the rising tide. According to OTA research, malvertising increased by over 200% in 2013 to over 209, 000 incidents, generating over 12.4 billion malicious ad impressions. The threats are significant, warns the Seattle-based non-profit—with the majority of malicious ads infecting users’ computers via ‘drive by downloads, ‘ which occur when a user innocently visits a web site, with no interaction or clicking required.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Malvertising Up By Over 200%