Huge Database Leak Reveals 1.37 Billion Email Addresses and Exposes Illegal Spam Operation

One of the largest spam operations in the world has exposed its entire operation to the public, leaking its database of 1.37bn email addresses thanks to a faulty backup. From a report: A faulty backup has inadvertently exposed the entire working database of notorious spam operator River City Media (RCM). In all, the database contains more than 1.37 billion email addresses, and for some records there are additional details such as names, real-world addresses, and IP addresses. It’s a situation that’s described as “a tangible threat to online privacy and security.” Details about the leak come courtesy of Chris Vickery from macOS security firm MacKeeper who — with a team of helpers — has been investigating since January. River City Media’s database ended up online thanks to incorrectly-configured Rsync backups. In the words of Vickery: “Chances are you, or at least someone you know, is affected.” The leaked, and unprotected, database is what’s behind the sending of over a billion spam emails every day — helped, as Vickery points out, by “a lot of automation, years of research, and fair bit of illegal hacking techniques.” But it’s more than a database that has leaked — it’s River City Media’s entire operation. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Huge Database Leak Reveals 1.37 Billion Email Addresses and Exposes Illegal Spam Operation

All the Stuff iCloud Syncs Besides the Obvious

We all know that iCloud syncs up items like photos, contacts, reminders, calendar events, and iMessage conversations, but chances are you’ve noticed that it also syncs up a few other little things. Finer Things in Tech is putting together a list of those unexpected synced items. Read more…

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All the Stuff iCloud Syncs Besides the Obvious

How to Make Sure Facebook Doesn’t Filter Out Page and Friend Updates

Facebook doesn’t automatically show you all the content shared by your liked pages or even friends, and recently Facebook page owners have been experiencing extreme declines in audience reach . If there are pages or friends you always want to see updates for, here are the settings you should change. Read more…

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How to Make Sure Facebook Doesn’t Filter Out Page and Friend Updates

How to Contact Executive Customer Service and Get Your Problem Solved

We’ve all been there: You call customer service, get bounced around, transferred, and dropped. Or worse, your issue never gets resolved even after you talk to someone. You probably know you can escalate to a manager, or even higher, to “executive” support. But at that level, there’s an art to getting what you want. Here’s what you need to know. Read more…

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How to Contact Executive Customer Service and Get Your Problem Solved

Tretflix is a Ready-To-Install Downloading PC Packed with Usenet Tools

Usenet is a great resource for lots of things , and we’ve talked about a number of great apps to use to get the most out of Usenet. Tretflix is a custom, ready-to-install operating system that wraps them all up into an easy-to-use package. All you do is provide the hardware. Read more…

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Tretflix is a Ready-To-Install Downloading PC Packed with Usenet Tools

Make 20 Meals to Feed a Family of Four for $150 and One Trip to Costco

Costco is one of the best places to buy quality ingredients in bulk and save money on food. With just one trip and $150, you can pick up enough to make nearly three weeks’ worth of dinners (4 servings each)—and have lots of leftovers. Read more…        

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Make 20 Meals to Feed a Family of Four for $150 and One Trip to Costco

PeeperPeerer Catches Who Has Been Snooping on Your Private Messages

Android: If you suspect your roommate or anyone else has been reading your private messages on your phone, then PeeperPeeper can catch them red-handed. The app creates fake shortcuts for popular messaging apps and takes a photo when someone opens them. Read more…        

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PeeperPeerer Catches Who Has Been Snooping on Your Private Messages

Mystery Science Theater 3000 Returns Thanksgiving Day 2013 with Web-Only Live Stream

It’s the 25th Anniversary of Mystery Science Theater 3000 , and one of the events happening in celebration is the return of the show’s Turkey Day Marathon! Read on for the details of this Web-only live stream kicking off November 28th at 9:00 am PT/12:00 noon ET. From the MST3K Turkey Day website : Do you miss the Turkey Day Marathons of yesteryear, when, loaded with tryptophan, you’d curl up on the sofa with friends and family for a postprandial MST session? Well, you can relive the magic once again with a special Web-only Turkey Day Marathon featuring six classic episodes curated and hosted by Joel. This streaming event will kick off on Thursday at 9 am PT / 12 noon ET on Thursday, November 28th at MST3KTurkeyDay.com. Fans who have suggestions for episodes they’d like to see included are encouraged to tweet Joel (@JoelGHodgson) with their votes. On Turkey Day, MST-ies can join in on Twitter with the tag #mst3k. For updates on MST3K Turkey Day, follow @ShoutFactory and @JoelGHodgson. VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON! Got news? Click here to submit it! Curl up with some MST3K in the comments section below!

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Mystery Science Theater 3000 Returns Thanksgiving Day 2013 with Web-Only Live Stream

This Is How NASA Made Composite Images Before Photoshop Existed

You might think that this image looks a little bodged together, and you’d be right to. After all, it’s literally a collage of photographs obtained by Voyager I—all the way back in 1979. Read more…        

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This Is How NASA Made Composite Images Before Photoshop Existed

City Councilman: Email Tax Could Discourage Spam, Fund Post Office Functions

New submitter Christopher Fritz writes “The Berkeley, CA city council recently met to discuss the closing of their downtown post office, in attempt to find a way to keep it from relocating. This included talk of ‘a very tiny tax’ to help keep the U.S. Post Office’s vital functions going. The suggestion came from Berkeley City Councilman Gordon Wozniak: ‘There should be something like a bit tax. I mean a bit tax could be a cent per gigabit and they would still make, probably, billions of dollars a year And there should be, also, a very tiny tax on email.’ He says a one-hundredth of a cent per e-mail tax could discourage spam while not impacting the typical Internet user, and a sales tax on Internet transactions could help fund ‘vital functions that the post office serves.’ We all know an e-mail tax is infeasible, and sales tax for online purchases and for digital purchases are likely unavoidable forever, but here’s hoping talk of taxing data usage doesn’t work its way to Washington.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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City Councilman: Email Tax Could Discourage Spam, Fund Post Office Functions