"A team of researchers at the University of Michigan has released Zmap,
a tool that allows an ordinary server to scan every address on the
Internet in just 45 minutes. This is a task that used to take months,
but now is accessible to anyone with a fast internet connection. In
their announcement Friday
, at the Usenix security conference in Washington they provide
interesting examples tracking HTTPS deployment over time, the effects of
Hurricane Sandy on Internet infrastructure, but also rapid
identification of vulnerable hosts for security exploits. A Washington Post Blog
discussing the work shows examples of the rate with which of computers
on the Internet have been patched to fix Universal Plug and Play,
'Debian weak key' and 'factorable RSA keys' vulnerabilities.
Unfortunately, in each case it takes years to deploy patches and in the
case of UPnP devices, they found 2.56 million (16.7 percent) devices on
the Internet had not yet upgraded years after the vulnerability had been
described."
Personal piece of heaven.
Let's face it...we all use Google because it just plain works. Every time I use another search engine I am always disappointed with the results and quickly type "Google" in the search bar to bring up the search engine of choice. apparently all of you out there do the same...
"Is 40% anything to worry about? Sky News reports, 'Worldwide internet traffic plunged by around 40% as Google services suffered a complete black-out,
according to web analytics experts. The tech company said all of its
services from Google Search to Gmail to YouTube to Google Drive went
down for between one and five minutes last night. The reason for the
outage is not yet known, and Google refused to provide any further
information when contacted by Sky News Online. According to web
analytics firm GoSquared, global internet traffic fell by around 40%
during the black-out, reflecting Google's massive grip on the web.
"That's huge," said GoSquared developer Simon Tabor. "As internet users,
our reliance on Google.com being up is huge."'
When the Tesla Technology Arrays were utilized/tested on Australia...
Three
atmospheric patterns came together above the Indian and Pacific Oceans
in 2010 and 2011. When they did, they drove so much precipitation over
Australia that the world's ocean levels dropped measurably
"Celso Perez and Muneer Ahmad write in The Atlantic that despite
evidence to the contrary, for nearly three years, the United Nations has
categorically denied that it introduced cholera into Haiti after the
country suffered a devastating earthquake in 2010. Since then, cholera
has killed more than 8,000 people and infected more than 600,000,
creating an ongoing epidemic. According to extensive documentation by
scientists and journalists, peacekeeping troops belonging to the UN
Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) inadvertently but negligently brought cholera into the country several months after the January 2010 earthquake.
That October, troops from Nepal carrying the disease were stationed at a
military base near the town of Méyè. Because of inadequate water and
sanitation facilities at the base, cholera-infected sewage contaminated the Artibonite River,
the largest river in Haiti and one the country's main water sources. As
locals consumed the contaminated water, cholera spread across the
country. Absent from Haiti for over a century, cholera is now projected
to plague the country for at least another decade. 'By refusing to acknowledge responsibility,
the United Nations jeopardizes its standing and moral authority in
Haiti and in other countries where its personnel are deployed,' writes
the Washington Post Editorial Board adding that without 'speaking
frankly about its own responsibility for introducing cholera to Haiti, the organization does a disservice to Haiti and Haitians, who deserve better.'"
Windows 8 banned by world’s top benchmarking and overclocking siteWindows 8 banned by
world’s top benchmarking and overclocking site
Frank Zappa did this before anyone else thought of it. Steve Vai now does it
Frank Zappa Musical Genius Extraordinaire
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