Whole lotta onions: Number of Tor hidden sites spikes—along with paranoia

Two sudden leaps in the number of advertised “hidden services” on Tor have led to rampant speculation about the cause of them. (credit: The Tor Project ) In recent weeks, the number of “hidden services”—usually Web servers and other Internet services accessible by a “.onion” address on the Tor anonymizing network—has risen dramatically. After experiencing an earlier spike in February, the number of hidden services tracked by Tor spiked to 114,000 onion addresses on March 1. They then dropped just as quickly, falling to just below 70,000 hidden services seen by Tor on Thursday—still twice the number that Tor had held steady at for most of 2015. “We don’t know what’s causing this,” said Kate Krauss, the director of communications and public policy for the Tor Project. “But it’s not difficult for even one person—a researcher, for instance—to create a lot of new onion addresses—which is not the same as actual websites or services. In fact, we want the process of creating onion addresses to be as easy as possible to encourage the creation of more onion services. These spikes are typically temporary—and as you see from the chart, this one is already going away.” Still, there has never been this sort of wild gyration in their number in recent times—or at least as far back as the Tor Project has kept metric data. So what caused the sudden near-tripling of the size of Tor’s hidden Web and its rapid contraction? Based on a deeper look at Tor’s metrics and discussions with both Tor developers and security experts, the huge spike in the “size” of the hidden Web within Tor was likely caused by a perfect storm of coincidences: major Internet censorship events in at least two countries, the relatively rapid adoption of a new messaging tool, a malware explosion, and ongoing attempts to undermine the privacy of the network. Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Read the original:
Whole lotta onions: Number of Tor hidden sites spikes—along with paranoia

Telstra To Roll Out 1000Mbps 4G

An anonymous reader writes: After beginning support for LTE Category 9 last year on their 4Gx network (with it’s theoretical max download speed of 450Mbps), Telstra has now announced that they will upgrade their network to support LTE category 16. In theory, this means that if a customer has the correct equipment in the correct location, they will be able to have a maximum theoretical download speed of 1000Mbps, and a maximum theoretical upload speed of 150Mbps. Of course, it’s unlikely that customers will be able to sustain these speeds, but Telstra lists on their website that 4GX devices currently have a typical download speed of 2 to 75Mbps on 4GX. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View article:
Telstra To Roll Out 1000Mbps 4G

AT&T matches Verizon’s $650 offer to swap carriers

AT&T has announced that it’ll hand you up to $650 in credit should you choose to switch from another mobile carrier. If you’re prepared to jump through the various hurdles, you’ll be entitled to a pre-paid gift card equal to the value of your ETF or device balance. In addition, the network is letting you pair the deal with its buy one, get one free offer, enabling you to grab two shiny new devices at the same time. The offering is the latest in a long series of credit offers, with Verizon pushing its own offer to $650 last December . America’s mobile market is now so saturated that customers that are willing to switch provider are worth their weight in gold. At first, it was just ETF-based skirmishes between T-Mobil e and AT&T , but things really warmed up when device subsidies went out the window. Then, every network was using its spare cash to get you out from under the yoke of their rivals . It wasn’t long before everyone was escalating the amount of money they’d promise you, and now $650 seems to be the new normal . Of course, the question we feel we have to ask is: how sustainable is all of this? Source: AT&T

Visit link:
AT&T matches Verizon’s $650 offer to swap carriers

Watch An Apple IIgs Boot Over 20 Years After It Was Last Turned Off

 Digital archeology is one of my favorite blog post forms. An avid X user from 198X resurrects an old system that he or she had used to create something amazing/build a business/write a game/or generally hack around. The resulting material – photos, video, and commentary – are priceless. Today we bring you Quinn Dunki has post a truly amazing look inside her Apple IIgs and a passel… Read More

Continued here:
Watch An Apple IIgs Boot Over 20 Years After It Was Last Turned Off

Oculus Co-Founder Confirms The Rift Will Be Sold At Cost

 The Oculus Rift will be sold with a $599 retail price. And Oculus is taking a wash on the hardware. Oculus Co-Founder and VP of Product, Nate Mitchell, revealed to TechCrunch’s Jordan Crook earlier today that the company is selling the hardware at cost in an effort to kickstart the VR ecosystem. This is on top giving away 7, 000 Oculus Rift units to early Kickstarter backers. At $600, … Read More

Read More:
Oculus Co-Founder Confirms The Rift Will Be Sold At Cost

Chicago And Los Angeles Are Next Up For Google Fiber

 You know the drill. Once a city has spoken with Google about bringing Fiber into their hood, there’s a process for the city to go through. A lengthy one. Checklists. The whole nine yards. Two new cities are exploring Fiber with Google and they are Chicago and Los Angeles. Yes, San Francisco has been skipped again and I’m going to go cry into my slow internet from Comcast.… Read More

Read More:
Chicago And Los Angeles Are Next Up For Google Fiber

10,000 wax cylinders digititzed and free to download

The University of California at Santa Barbara library has undertaken an heroic digitization effort for its world-class archive of 19th and early 20th century wax cylinder recordings, and has placed over 10,000 songs online for anyone to download, stream and re-use. (more…)

Original post:
10,000 wax cylinders digititzed and free to download

Sprint Faces Backlash For Adding MDM Software To Devices

itwbennett writes: On Wednesday, Sprint customer Johnny Kim discovered an in-store technician adding MDM software to his personal iPhone 6 without prior notice or permission. Kim took to Twitter with his complaint, sparking a heated conversation about privacy and protection. One expert who commented on the issue told CSO’s Steve Ragan that ‘it’s possible Sprint sees the installation of MDM software as an additional security offering, or perhaps as a means to enable phone location services to the consumer.’ But, as Ragan points out, ‘even if that were true, it’s against [Sprint’s] written policy and such offerings are offered at the cost of privacy and control over the user’s own devices.’ (MDM here means “Mobile Device Management.”) Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View original post here:
Sprint Faces Backlash For Adding MDM Software To Devices

EPA finds more toxic VW emissions fraud in Audis and Porsches

The EPA, the California Air Resources Board and Environment Canada have detected more fraudulent firmware in VW products; this time in 2014-2016 cars from the super-profitable Audii and Porsche lines. (more…)

Read More:
EPA finds more toxic VW emissions fraud in Audis and Porsches

Apple Admits That Delaminating Screens Might Actually Be a Problem

It’s taken 6, 000 pissed-off customers, a Change.org petition , and an entire website named Staingate , but Apple has finally agreed that yes, a coating peeling off Retina Macbook displays is not good. Read more…

View original post here:
Apple Admits That Delaminating Screens Might Actually Be a Problem