15 May 2012

Would You Pay To Have Your Facebook Posts Featured?

TechnoBuffalo

Ever take pains to word your Facebook shares just right, only to discover that friends and loved ones missed it? What if you could pay for the privilege of making sure they see the super important update? That’s the notion that Facebook is playing around with in New Zealand, as it charges users $0.40–$2 to highlight posts.

This came to light when a user noticed the offer and, thinking it was a scam, reported it. But a Facebook representative confirmed the new test feature. “This particular test is simply to gauge people’s interest in this method of sharing with their friends,” the rep told the BBC.

If Facebook launched this service in your home country, would you pay the company to promote your updates?

[via BBC]

14 May 2012

HP loses hundreds of thousands of CA social services records—on microfiche

The California office of In-Home Supportive Services, which provides health support to elderly and disabled people, reported on Friday that the personal records of some 700,000 caregivers and care recipients were either lost or stolen.

But this data loss was not due to a server breach, or some complex phishing attack—instead, the Social Services office said that Hewlett Packard, which manages the data controlled by the office, notified the IHSS of the breach after a physical package containing microfiche with thousands of entries of payroll data went missing from a damaged package that HP had shipped by U.S. Postal Service to the State Compensation Insurance Fund in Riverside, CA.

As the package arrived damaged and incomplete, it’s unclear whether the information was lost or stolen, but the state has launched an internal investigation and notified law enforcement in the hopes of resolving the issue, according to the Los Angeles Times. "The possibly compromised information, dating from October to December 2011, for 375,000 workers included names, Social Security numbers and wages. For 326,000 recipients, state identification numbers may be at risk,” the LA Times reports. The In-Home Supportive Services office is also sending out hundreds of thousands of letters to potentially affected parties.

Read more on Ars Technica…


14 May 2012

Article: CTIA: The good, the bad and the very, very ugly


CTIA: The good, the bad and the very, very ugly
http://gigaom.com/broadband/ctia-the-good-the-bad-and-the-very-very-ugly/

(Sent from Flipboard)

Sent from my iPhone

14 May 2012

Baidu introducing new Cloud OS next week, purported device pictures leak

The Verge - All Posts
Purported Baidu Cloud device leak

Last year Chinese search engine Baidu announced its own fork of Android called Yi, and the company is now readying the next iteration of the mobile operating system, called simply Baidu Cloud. Reuters spoke with the company's head of mobile, Wang Jing, who stated that the company has "a few partnerships coming up and will announce it in a week." Adding fuel to the fire, Sina Tech reports that several images of an unidentified smartphone briefly appeared on the Sina Weibo account of the company's mobile director Yue Guofeng before being pulled. The images show a phone that looks like a colorful, four-button riff on Nokia's Lumia line, which Sina Tech says will feature a 3.5-inch screen, 100GB of cloud storage, and a Siri-like voice...

Continue reading…

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Sent from my iPhone

14 May 2012

Sunday Afternoon News and Things

14 May 2012

Iranian leader's fatwa against anti-filtering tools censored by its internet filter

The Verge - All Posts
via farm6.staticflickr.com

Iran's attempts at censoring digital communications have come under global scrutiny in recent months, and now the country's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has issued a fatwa outlawing anti-filtering tools that help citizens access blocked material on the internet. However, in an ironic twist, less than 30 hours after being published the religious edict itself was blocked to those trying to access it inside the country. Because the filtering software uses fairly simplistic keyword tools to detect pages which should be banned, it's likely that the occurrence of the word "anti-filtering" was enough to place the site onto the blacklist.

It's the latest in the country's attempts to create a "safe" internet, which blocks content that...

Continue reading…

Who doesn't love a good fatwa?
13 May 2012

Ashton Kutcher Spotted Wearing Steve Jobs' Trademark Wardrobe [Mac Blog]

The casting of Ashton Kutcher in the role of Steve Jobs in an upcoming independent film focusing on the Apple co-founder's life has certainly generated a significant amount of attention for the project, despite the fact that the film is a completely separate effort from the high-profile planned Sony Pictures film to be based on Walter Isaacson's authorized biography of Jobs.


With filming on the indie film starring Kutcher having already begun with the star on break from his work on the TV show Two and a Half Men, TMZ shares a few photos of Kutcher seen wearing Jobs' trademark outfit of a black turtleneck, jeans, and sneakers. The photos were reportedly taken on Friday while Kutcher was walking to the set of the film.


Kutcher has been said by some to bear an uncanny resemblance to a young Steve Jobs, particularly with having adopted a close copy of Jobs' hairstyle and facial hair from those days. Jobs did not adopt his trademark wardrobe until a number of years later, but Kutcher is clearly taking on that aspect of Jobs' identity for the role as well.


31 Mar 2012

What Happens After We Kill Big Media? | PandoDaily

In a post-Hollywood world of leaner budgets, there would be no “Lord of The Rings,” no “The Dark Knight,” and no “Moneyball.” On TV, there would be no “Mad Men” and no “Lost.” Disruption of Hollywood revenue streams would result in a new economic reality that would dictate expensive shows being replaced by cheaper programs like “The Jersey Shore.” Consider a future where this is the norm, and ask yourself if this is really the desired outcome.

The assumption here is that people don't want to pay for content. But I don't believe this is true. We just want to cut out the middle men who are restricting access and forcing up pricing.

31 Mar 2012

Senator Al Franken: 'privacy is a casualty' of Google and Facebook's success | The Verge

"You are not their client. You are their product."

4 Mar 2012

When Steve met Zac


Taken at John Hunter Childrens Hospital

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