Facebook Scans Chats and Posts For Criminal Activity | Windows 8 Mail Leaves Users Pining For the Desktop — or Even Their Phones Transform your enterprise data centers into a highly scalable enterprise clouds Learn how to scale application and service delivery infrastructures in the cloud era Technical whitepaper - A Revolution In Cloud Networking: Citrix TriScale Technology Learn More! This white paper will detail the rise of mobile applications and why code signing certificates are essential to protecting the entire mobile apps ecosystem. Learn More! From the asimov's-laws-of-robotics-make-for-boring-drives department Maximum Prophet writes "Here's a thought: at the start, only rich people will be able to pay for a completely autonomous car. Auto-autos will only go the speed limit. Rich people don't like to go slow. Ergo, there won't be any market for... From the gonna-find-out-who's-naughty-and-nice department An anonymous reader writes "Facebook has added sleuthing to its array of data-mining capabilities, scanning your posts and chats for criminal activity. If the social-networking giant detects suspicious behavior, it flags the content and determines... From the living-free department jfruh writes "Sam Muirhead, a New Zealand filmmaker living Berlin, will, on the 1st of August, begin an experiment in living an open source life for a year. But this is going way beyond just trading in his Mac for a Linux machine and Final Cut Pro... From the you've-got-mail department jbrodkin writes "The e-mail client in Windows 8 is the shell of a potentially good application — but Microsoft hasn't given it the proper care it deserves. With less than a month before Windows 8 hits RTM, Mail is a mess that doesn't support... From the go-big-or-go-home department benfrog writes "The developers of jQuery recently announced in a blog entry that jQuery 2.0 will drop support for legacy versions of Internet Explorer. The release will come in parallel with version 1.9, however, which will include support for... From the it's-not-easy-being-green department An anonymous reader writes with a followup to news from last weekend that Apple had turned its back on the EPEAT hardware certification standard. After hearing criticism from customers, the media, and governmental organizations that Apple wasn't... From the a-spoonful-of-sugar department pigrabbitbear writes "Lamar Smith just can't get a break. The Texas congressman and widely despised author of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) ruffled the Internet's feathers once again this week with the quiet unveiling of a new piece of... From the nowhere-is-safe department An anonymous reader writes "In an editorial at Penny Arcade, Ben Kuchera writes about how Microsoft's subscription-based Xbox Live platform has become an advertising cash cow — to the detriment of users who already pay for the service.... From the get-to-the-back-of-the-line department New submitter BButlerNWW writes "Federal agencies must be assured priority and uninterrupted access to public cloud resources before fully embracing the technology for national security and emergency response IT functions, a recent report finds.... From the cheap-ticket department You asked questions of Bas Lansdorp, who's behind a project to send a quartet of astronauts to Mars — on a one-way trip. Lansdorp provides below his answers to inquiries about food, fuel, suicide, privacy, and more. So whether you're curious... From the new-ways-to-sell-customers department silentbrad writes with this quote from the Globe and Mail:"Canada's big banks are preparing to launch 'virtual wallets' as early as this fall that will allow consumers to digitally consolidate their credit and debit cards from any financial... From the do-you-even-know-how-baseball-works department MrSeb sends this excerpt from DailyDot: "Shortly, a new system in the U.S. will allow your ISP to give you gradually sterner warnings and possible punishment if you download copyrighted material. The Copyright Alerts System (CAS) — more... From the you-bred-velocibacteria? department An anonymous reader writes with news that researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have taken a gene from 500-million-year-old bacteria and inserted it into modern E. coli bacteria. They then allowed the bacteria to evolve over the... From the price-is-right department An anonymous reader tips news that a Russian developer has posted a video showing how in-app purchases for some iOS software can be acquired without payment. The hack does't require the device to be jailbroken, and can be accomplished even by... From the final-version-needs-lasers-don't-ask-why department An anonymous reader writes "The author of Varnish, Poul-Henning Kamp, has written an interesting critique of SPDY and the other draft protocols trying to become HTTP 2.0. He suggests none of the candidates make the cut. Quoting: 'Overall, I find... |
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