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Assembly / Re: What version of assembly? Any
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 11, 2009, 05:56 PM »HLA does count, but pick where you ask for help carefully.
Ehtyar.
Ehtyar.

Don't get me wrong, I'm a bit concerned too about things like this, too, but as long as you have to opt-in first then that helps alleviate some of the concern.I feel the same way. Personally I'd prefer it didn't exist at all, given the very limited applications.-Deozaan (February 10, 2009, 03:27 PM)
Not surprised at 4, but still, sigh...hoping that eventually, continued demonstrations of this sort might have an impact on future decisions...Amen.-ewemoa (February 11, 2009, 04:01 AM)



My pleasure, as always gentsIs this a boys own column then?-Ehtyar (February 08, 2009, 12:17 AM)-Carol Haynes (February 08, 2009, 07:16 AM)
I think the absurdity of #7 (non-readable biometric IDs) demonstrates that the government's real intent is not to provide a secure means for the populace to prove their identity to one another. It's really because the government wants a more-complete database of all its subjects. Period.Very well said.-CWuestefeld (February 08, 2009, 11:40 AM)

| Hi all. As usual, you can find last week's news here. Enjoy ![]() |
A carefully coordinated global ATM heist last November resulted in a one-day haul of $9 million in cash, after a hacker penetrated a server at payment processor RBS WorldPay, New York's Fox 5 reports.
RBS WorldPay announced on December 23 that they'd been hacked, and personal information on approximately 1.5 million payroll-card and gift-card customers had been stolen. (Payroll cards are debit cards issued and recharged by employers as an alternative to paychecks and direct-deposit.) Now we know that account numbers and other mag-stripe data needed to clone the debit cards were also compromised in the breach.
For the second time in less than 18 months, the job-search Web site Monster.com was breached, along with USAJobs.gov, which Monster's parent company runs for the federal government. And yet Monster might suffer little fallout - because the overall state of computer security is so bad anyway.
Attacks against Web sites have become so common, security experts say, that Monster Worldwide Inc. won't necessarily scare customers away with its January disclosure that its database was plundered of user IDs, passwords, e-mail addresses, names and phone numbers. Monster makes money by charging employers that post jobs and scan the resumes of applicants, who use the service for free.
A human error at Google caused its main search engine to briefly identify every site on the web as a potentially malicious destination that represented a threat to end users, the company said.
Starting early Saturday morning California time, the world's largest search engine flagged each search result with the warning: "This site may harm your computer"
Attempts to visit a search link were met with Google's standard malware warning, which blocks users from actually reaching the intended destination:
Using inexpensive off-the-shelf components, an information security expert has built a mobile platform that can clone large numbers of the unique electronic identifiers used in US passport cards and next generation drivers licenses.
The $250 proof-of-concept device - which researcher Chris Paget built in his spare time - operates out of his vehicle and contains everything needed to sniff and then clone RFID, or radio frequency identification, tags. During a recent 20-minute drive in downtown San Francisco, it successfully copied the RFID tags of two passport cards without the knowledge of their owners.
Sony has unveiled the next step in biometric security: a camera-based system that analyses veins in your fingers.
The user first lays one side of their index finger down on a small pad, after which a series of LEDs shine infrared light onto it. A CMOS sensor sat on the other side of the finger then picks up light scattered off of the veins inside the user’s finger.
An algorithm uses this information to build up a picture of the user’s vein layout. Sony claims that, much like a fingerprint, a person’s vein arrangement is unique and that it doesn’t ever change.
The website for one of the net's more popular bulletin board software packages has been taken offline following a security breach that gave an attacker full access to a database containing names, email, address, and hashed passwords for its entire user base.
In a message posted Sunday, administrators of phpBB.com said the attacker gained access through an unpatched security bug in PHPlist, a third-party email application. The miscreant had access for more than two weeks before the breach was discovered, and phpBB remained down at time of writing, more than three days later. Administrators didn't respond to emails seeking comment.
The British Identity and Passport Service (IPS) has spent £4.7bn ($6.6bn) on its new biometric ID card system. But it has not established a timeline for a card-reader rollout.
Without the necessary card readers, the biometric information such as fingerprint scans stored in the cards is inaccessible and therefore useless for ID verification.
In a statement released on January 29, the IPS reiterated its schedule for releasing the cards, beginning with over 50,000 foreign nationals by this April, then airport workers in the fall of 2009, and leading up to full availability in 2011 and 2012 "to the wider population on an entirely voluntary basis."
The US ISP market is rapidly heading towards a future where unlimited monthly usage will be the exception rather than the rule. Comcast has already imposed usage caps, while a number of other ISPs are experimenting with limiting their subscribers' downloads. Although most of them are testing the limits in individual markets, it looks like Charter has decided to roll out caps for all its customers.
DSL Reports was tipped off about the plans earlier this week; we received confirmation from a Charter spokesperson this afternoon. She told Ars that the the changes will be implemented through an update to Charter's acceptable use policy that will roll out on Monday, February 9.
The Department of Defense (DoD) has launched Forge.mil, a software project management site that will host the military's public open source software projects. Inspired by SourceForge, the new site was created to accelerate development by facilitating broader collaboration between government agencies.
The DoD is a major proponent of the open development model and uses open source software extensively in the field. With the aim of fostering broader military adoption of open source software, the DoD defined an Open Technology Development roadmap in 2006 in collaboration with the Open Source Software Institute. In that report, the DoD discussed a wide range of issues that make open source software desirable for government adoption, including reduced risk of vendor lock-in, increased flexibility, greater interoperability, and reduced IT costs.
A San Francisco startup led by a former Tesla Motors engineer is developing an electric motorcycle capable of 150 mph, a claim that, if true, would make it the fastest production electric vehicle in the world.
Mission Motors unveiled the bike, dubbed Mission One, at the TED conference and said it will begin selling them next year for $69,000 apiece. Although several electric motorcycles have been announced in recent weeks, Mission Motors sticks out because its 12 employees have worked for Tesla, Ducati North America and Intel, and the bike they're building could set a new benchmark for EVs of all kinds.
Google Ocean expands this map to include large swathes of the ocean floor and abyssal plain.
Users can dive beneath a dynamic water surface to explore the 3D sea floor terrain.
The map also includes 20 content layers, containing information from the world's leading scientists, researchers, and ocean explorers.
Al Gore was at the launch event in San Francisco which, Google hopes, will take its mapping software a step closer to total coverage of the entire globe.
The "opt-in" Latitude service uses data from mobile phone masts, GPS, or wi-fi hardware to update a user's location automatically.
Users can also manually set their advertised location anywhere they like, or turn the broadcast off altogether.
The service has raised a number of security concerns, as many users may not be aware that it is enabled.
Latitude is based on Google's My Location feature that has been in place since last year.
)At a recent Hall of Fame news conference, a woman claiming to be Ex-Cowboys receiver Bob Hayes' half sister read an emotional thank you letter written by him in 1999. But something is amiss.
Bob Hayes died in 2002 and this letter was supposedly a thank you pre-written in the the hope that he would someday enter into the Hall of Fame after three decades of disappointment. Naturally, a reading at the conference by his half-sister Lucille Hester sparked a lot of emotion among the Cowboy's organization, the fans and the NFL. However, it appears that the letter is actually a forgery, and Lucille may be a Texas-sized fraud.

That was my understanding also.VMware View Open Client lets you connect from a Linux desktop to remote Windows desktops managed by VMware View. It is available under the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 (LGPL v 2.1).I got that from the google code page where you download the client. You do have to buy the vmware view, and you have to run linux, because this client isn't for windows-nite_monkey (February 05, 2009, 09:02 AM)