In his largest donation to date, the social network’s CEO donates nearly $500 million to a local foundation to focus on projects in health and education. [Read more]
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Facebook’s Zuckerberg gives a boatload of cash to charity
In his largest donation to date, the social network’s CEO donates nearly $500 million to a local foundation to focus on projects in health and education. [Read more]
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Facebook’s Zuckerberg gives a boatload of cash to charity
The social network is rumored to be amping up its video ads by adding in autoplay, audience targeting, and video expansion. [Read more]
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Facebook said to launch autoplay video ads in news feed
The ever-booming social network and venue for the “pulse of the planet” delivered the news in a tweet, of course. [Read more]
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Twitter surpasses 200M active monthly users
DECula writes “In a move not communicated to its users before hand, Google’s Gmail servers were reconfigured to not connect to remote pop3 servers that have self-signed certificates, leaving folks with unencrypted connections, or no service when getting email from other services. Not good for the small folks. One suggestion was to allow placing the public keys on Google’s side in the user configuration. That would be a heck of a lot better than just dropping users into never never land.” Apparently, “valid” now means “paid someone Google approves to sign the certificate.” It’s not like commercial CAs have the best security track record either. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Gmail Drops Support for Connecting To Pop3 Servers With Self -Signed Certs
A team of forensic researchers from the Metropolitan Police in London, UK, claim to be able to accurately timestamp any audio recording —using just the background electrical hum present in any digital recording. More »
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Police Can Timestamp Any Audio Recording From Background Interference Alone
An anonymous reader points out an AP report which says a judge in Guatemala has ordered the release of John McAfee from a detention center. “Lawyer Telesforo Guerra said the judge notified him verbally of the ruling, but added that it may take a day for formal written notification to win McAfee’s release, possibly as soon as Wednesday.” McAfee, on the run from Belizean police, was arrested in Guatemala several days ago after making himself known to authorities. He did so because a pair of reporters who were interviewing him posted a photo which included metadata on the photo’s location. In a live broadcast on Sunday, McAfee expressed a desire to return to the U.S. “I simply would like to live comfortably day by day, fish, swim, enjoy my declining years. My long-term plan was simply to get away from Belize, think, and decide what to do.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Guatemala Judge Orders McAfee Released
It’s not clear what might have caused the outage this morning, but it appeared to be fairly widespread. [Read more]
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Gmail goes down briefly for both consumers and enterprise users
The Taiwanese tech manufacturing giant, Foxconn Electronics, is rumored to be starting up manufacturing plants in the US next year, moving away from its long time “home” base of mainland China. More »
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Rumor: Hey Americans! Foxconn Is Apparently Building Factories In LA And Detroit
chicksdaddy writes “A presentation at the Passwords^12 Conference in Oslo, Norway (slides), has moved the goalposts on password cracking yet again. Speaking on Monday, researcher Jeremi Gosney (a.k.a epixoip) demonstrated a rig that leveraged the Open Computing Language (OpenCL) framework and a technology known as Virtual Open Cluster (VCL) to run the HashCat password cracking program across a cluster of five, 4U servers equipped with 25 AMD Radeon GPUs communicating at 10 Gbps and 20 Gbps over Infiniband switched fabric. Gosney’s system elevates password cracking to the next level, and effectively renders even the strongest passwords protected with weaker encryption algorithms, like Microsoft’s LM and NTLM, obsolete. In a test, the researcher’s system was able to generate 348 billion NTLM password hash checks per second. That renders even the most secure password vulnerable to compute-intensive brute force and wordlist (or dictionary) attacks. A 14 character Windows XP password hashed using LM for example, would fall in just six minutes, said Per Thorsheim, organizer of the Passwords^12 Conference. For some context: In June, Poul-Henning Kamp, creator of the md5crypt() function used by FreeBSD and other, Linux-based operating systems, was forced to acknowledge that the hashing function is no longer suitable for production use — a victim of GPU-powered systems that could perform ‘close to 1 million checks per second on COTS (commercial off the shelf) GPU hardware,’ he wrote. Gosney’s cluster cranks out more than 77 million brute force attempts per second against MD5crypt.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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New 25-GPU Monster Devours Strong Passwords In Minutes
dcblogs writes “The U.S. Dept. of Energy has set a goal to develop battery and energy storage technologies that are five times more powerful and five times cheaper within five years. DOE is creating a new center at Argonne National Laboratory, at a cost of $120 million over five years, that’s intended to reproduce development environments that were successfully used by Bell Laboratories and World War II’s Manhattan Project. ‘When you had to deliver the goods very, very quickly, you needed to put the best scientists next to the best engineers across disciplines to get very focused,’ said U.S. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu, on Friday. The Joint Center for Energy Storage Research isn’t designed to seek incremental improvements in existing technologies. This technology hub, according to DOE’s solicitation (PDF), ‘should foster new energy storage designs that begin with a “clean sheet of paper” — overcoming current manufacturing limitations through innovation to reduce complexity and cost.’ Other research labs, universities and private companies are participating in the effort.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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DOE Wants 5X Improvement In Batteries In 5 Years