Saturday, December 31, 2011

Russian challenger urges joint currency with EU (AP)

MOSCOW ? The Russian billionaire challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in March's presidential election said Thursday that he will push for a common currency with the European Union and liberalize the nation's political scene if elected.

Mikhail Prokhorov, who owns 80 percent of the New Jersey Nets basketball team, didn't detail his proposal for a "common global currency based on the euro and the ruble" in the outline of an election platform that he released on his Live Journal blog. But he pledged to push for Russia's integration into a "Big Europe."

The 46-year-old, who made his fortune in metals, banking and media and is estimated to be worth $18 billion, also promised to disband the parliament elected in a fraud-tainted vote earlier this month, and call for a repeat election next December.

That echoed the demand of participants in recent protests in Russia spurred by allegations of ballot-stuffing and other violations in the Dec. 4 election. Prokhorov attended the latest rally over the weekend, which drew up to 100,000 people ? the biggest protest in Russia's post-Soviet history.

His presidential bid follows his botched performance before the parliamentary election, when he formed a liberal political party with the Kremlin's tacit support but abandoned it under what he called Kremlin pressure.

Some observers have speculated that Prokhorov may have had the Kremlin's blessing to join the presidential race in order to cater to voters angry at the government while creating a semblance of genuine competition. Prokhorov has admitted that the Kremlin would like to use him, but insists he will play his own game and try to foster positive change.

Prokhorov also promised to ease controls on Russia's political scene, which has been tightly controlled by Putin, reform a justice system permeated by corruption and abolish the highly unpopular conscription of soldiers into the military, turning it into a fully professional force instead.

He said in his platform that Putin's so-called "sovereign democracy" masks "a contempt for the people, a readiness to sacrifice them for the sake of geopolitical fantasies."

"It's time to understand that the basis for the nation's successful development isn't in tons of coal, barrels of oil and cubic meters of timber, but in a system of human values shared by the society and protected by law," he said.

"I will build my policy based on a Russian humanitarian tradition that for a long time has been present only in Russian literature. It's time to make it part of the political sphere and the public life."

____

Nataliya Vasilyeva contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_prokhorov

transylvania terrell owens terrell owens carrie ann inaba california earthquake california earthquake jenna lyons

EntryLevelJob: Business Owners Guide To Learning How to Utilize Interns When Creating An Internship Program http://t.co/4u0WsjjW #jobs

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Business Owners Guide To Learning How to Utilize Interns When Creating An Internship Program bit.ly/uIkC3j #jobs EntryLevelJob

CollegeRecruiter.com

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/EntryLevelJob/statuses/152137851251859456

pacquiao vs marquez junior dos santos junior dos santos evelyn lauder devin hester devin hester shayne lamas

Friday, December 30, 2011

Stratfor hackers publish email, password data (Reuters)

Boston (Reuters) ? Hackers affiliated with the Anonymous group published hundreds of thousands of email addresses they claimed belong to subscribers of private intelligence analysis firm Strategic Forecasting Inc.

The list, published late on Thursday, includes email addresses appearing to belong to people working for large corporations, the U.S. military and major defense contractors - information that hackers could potentially use to target them with virus-tainted emails in an approach known as "spear phishing."

The Antisec faction of Anonymous last weekend disclosed that it had hacked into the firm, which is widely known as Stratfor and is also dubbed a "shadow CIA" because it gathers open-source intelligence on international crises.

The hackers had promised to cause "mayhem" by releasing stolen data from the private group.

Stratfor issued a statement confirming that the published email addresses had been stolen from the company's database, saying it was helping law enforcement probe the matter and conducting its own investigation.

"At Stratfor, we try to foster a culture of scrutiny and analysis, and we want to assure our customers and friends that we will apply the same rigorous standards in carrying out our internal review," the statement said.

"There are thousands of email addresses here that could be used for very targeted spear phishing attacks that could compromise national security," said John Bumgarner, chief technology officer of the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a non-profit group that studies cyber threats.

The Pentagon said it saw no threat so far.

"We are not aware of any compromise to the DOD information grid," said Lieutenant Colonel Jim Gregory, a spokesman for the Department of Defense, or DOD.

In a posting on the data-sharing website pastebin.com, the hackers said the list included some information from about 75,000 customers of Stratfor and approximately 860,000 people who had registered to use its site. It said that included some 50,000 email addresses belonging to the U.S. government's .gov and .mil domains.

The list also included addresses at contractors including BAE Systems Plc, Boeing Co, Lockheed Martin Corp and several U.S. government-funded labs that conduct classified research in Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Idaho Falls, Idaho; and Sandia and Los Alamos, New Mexico.

Corporations on the list include Bank of America, Exxon Mobil Corp, Goldman Sachs & Co and Thomson Reuters.

The entries included scrambled versions of passwords. Some of them can be unscrambled using databases known as rainbow tables that are available for download over the Internet, according to Bumgarner.

He said he randomly picked six people on the list affiliated with U.S. military and intelligence agencies to see if he could crack their passwords.

He said he was able to break four of them, each in about a second, using one rainbow table.

(Additional reporting by Tabassum Zakaria in Washington; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/security/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/wr_nm/us_usa_cyberattack_stratfor

alabama vs lsu robert schuller guy fawkes day jesse ventura stevie williams steve williams koch brothers

Winter storm expected to dump snow on Eastern Canada

Eastern Canadians are bracing for the first big storm of the season, which is expected to deliver heavy snow to eastern Ontario and southern Quebec upon its arrival late Tuesday.

Environment Canada meteorologist Steve Knott called the impending wintry blast "a reasonable-sized storm."

"It's not quite a weather bomb, but it's pretty close to a weather bomb," Knott said.

Environment Canada issued a series of snowfall warnings Tuesday stretching from Ottawa to Montreal and continuing across most of southeastern Quebec.

The weather office is predicting anywhere from 10 to 40 centimetres of snow, depending on the region.

In its snowfall warning, Environment Canada says: "The heavy snow, the strong winds and the blowing snow which accompany this system will reach several regions of Central and Eastern Quebec beginning tonight, leaving a more than significant amount of snow."

A rainfall warning associated with the same storm was also issued for Halifax, where more than 30 millimetres of rain could fall in six hours on Wednesday afternoon and evening, possibly causing localized flooding that could snarl the evening commute, according to Environment Canada.

The snow will likely switch to rain just north of New Brunswick, Knott said.

Environment Canada also issued a flash freeze warning on Tuesday for the Northern Ontario communities of North Bay and Sudbury.

Arctic air is expected to sweep into Ontario behind the storm, causing temperatures to drop and some of the fresh precipitation to freeze, Knott said. While the sidewalks may get a little slippery, the snow will stop eastern Ontario from experiencing a flash freeze.

The storm has been developing in the United States and producing rain over the northeastern states, Knott said.

For Ottawa and the surrounding areas, the storm is predicted to bring rain Tuesday afternoon, according to Environment Canada. The rain will switch to snow Tuesday evening, with up to 15 centimetres expected to fall by the time the snow stops Wednesday morning.

Montreal can also expect about 15 to 20 centimetres of snow starting Tuesday evening, Environment Canada forecasters predicted. Some parts of central and southeastern Quebec, including Quebec City, could receive up to 40 centimetres of snow, with strong winds adding to the poor conditions.

Forecasters expected the storm to continue Wednesday in Quebec and throughout the Maritimes, adding that some areas of southeastern Quebec will still experience bad weather on Thursday.

While no warnings were issued for southern Ontario, Environment Canada released a special weather statement Tuesday advising all of southern Ontario to expect mixed precipitation, likely consisting of rain and wet snow, starting Tuesday morning and continuing into the afternoon.

Light rain began falling in Toronto at around noon Tuesday, according to Environment Canada.

The storm is also predicted to move into Newfoundland and Labrador on Wednesday evening, leaving behind more than 20 centimetres of snow by Thursday, according to Environment Canada.

While no snowfall warnings have been released, Environment Canada issued a wind warning on Tuesday afternoon for the southwestern tip of Newfoundland, with wind gusts associated with the storm expected to reach 130 km/h on Wednesday evening.

The morning commute Wednesday will likely be messy in eastern Ontario and western Quebec, almost a "new experience" for drivers considering how mild this winter has been so far, Knott said.

For travellers flying during one of the busiest air travel times of the year, some airlines issued advisories on Tuesday asking passengers to check the status of their flights before leaving for the airport.

Porter Airlines and Air Canada both warned travellers in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal that the storm may cause delays or cancellations of some flights.

WestJet had not issued any advisories online by Tuesday afternoon, but spokeswoman Jennifer Sanford said no flights were delayed or cancelled due to the weather. An advisory would be posted if necessary, she said.

hroberts@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/hilarytroberts

? Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F75/~3/N-q9EWWUSn0/story.html

art basel 2011 straight no chaser straight no chaser bcs standings bcs standings douglas fir jim boeheim

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Quick Hits: Is Drunk Ecommerce Up?, Facebook Ads and Self-Image, Google Sued Over Secure Shopping Concepts

Written on
Dec 28, 2011?
Author
Brian LaRue? |
Share

ADOTAS - Yesterday, the New York Times reported on the patently self-evident fact that people are more inclined to spend money when they?re inebriated. (If you need stats, the article points to a study conducted by British comparison shopping site Kelkoo that says nearly half of respondents in the U.K. admitted to shopping online after drinking.) What?s more illuminating is how retailers might be responding to that. ChannelAdvisor, which provides software that helps retailers sell their goods online, has said its orders peak at 8 p.m. (presumably after happy hour?) and that orders for 9 p.m. to midnight are up this year from 2010; the article lists a number of email promotions from higher-end retailers ? Saks, Gilt Groupe, Neiman Marcus ? that landed in inboxes between 6 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. Now, though anyone who?s ever had three drinks on a payday will probably recognize how effortless (triumphant, even) it feels to order anything online in such a situation, it?s worth pointing out that the hours referenced in the Times story are simply times when people who work nine-to-fivers are at?home, and thus are in a much better position to conduct personal business than they are when they?re at work. Then again, that?s not as much fun as imagining a bunch of drunk people ogling bathmats on an Amazon store late at night.

? In other news of things that make sense, Facebook?s blog today mentions a Journal of Consumer Research study that says people identify more personally with brands whose ads pop up on their own Facebook pages than they do with brands whose ads appear on strangers? pages. To take it a step farther, the higher a person?s self esteem, the more they?ll identify with those brands advertised on their own pages. The concept this hinges on is implicit self-referencing, and the premise goes like this: If you have healthy self esteem, you?ll feel positive emotions when you look at your own Facebook profile. That lends itself to a positive association with the brands whose ads show on up your profile, especially if those brands have some connection to your self-identity.

? Google?s being sued for patent infringement, and the way buySAFE, the company bringing the suit, puts it, it sounds strikingly personal. Here?s the gist: buySAFE offers a secure online shopping service, which the company says is unique and protected by patent law. Since 2006, the lawsuit says, Google had tried to partner with buySAFE. buySAFE eventually shelved those talks, but, says the suit, those discussions plus Google?s 2010 recruitment of the then-COO of a buySAFE client company granted Google enough proprietary information to launch its own copycat service. You know it as Google Trusted Stores. Or maybe you don?t ? Google Trusted Stores just launched in October. And yet, the lawsuit goes on to accuse Google of timing its launch of Trusted Stores to ?impede buySAFE?s effort to raise additional capital,? as well as giving retailers that participate in Trusted Stores a higher search ranking and telling retailers they could use either Trusted Stores or buySAFE, but not both. Here?s a copy of the lawsuit. If buySAFE is right about this, Google pulled a few pretty brazen maneuvers. And if buySAFE isn?t right, it at least put in a good hustle: They?re laying the smack down on Google Trusted Sites before the latter is even remotely a household name.

Reader Comments.

No comments yet

Tags: amazon, brand identity, buySAFE, ChannelAdvisor, drinking, drunk shopping, ecommerce, facebook, Google, Google Trusted Stores, kelkoo, New-York-Times, online retail, patent infringement, secure shopping and self esteem

Source: http://www.adotas.com/2011/12/quick-hits-is-drunk-ecommerce-up-facebook-ads-and-self-image-google-sued-over-secure-shopping-concepts/

kindle fire review community matt schaub fire island fire island diaspora social network diaspora

WirelessMobile: Starting #Tips for New Samsung Galaxy SII, Nexus, Transformer Prime, Kindle Fire & More http://t.co/DC7wCp0c

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Starting #Tips for New Samsung Galaxy SII, Nexus, Transformer Prime, Kindle Fire & More goo.gl/fb/CwSi8 WirelessMobile

Wireless Mobile News

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/WirelessMobile/statuses/151510091651223552

land of the lost cleveland cavaliers cleveland cavaliers war horse k cups best buy we bought a zoo