@kp404 if you really are black you must be a homosexual too

BillCosbyAteMyHomework

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Edward Snowden Got a Bunch of NSA Info By Stealing a Coworker's Password
It's fun to imagine the spy games that must have been involved in Edward Snowden's exposure of the NSA's massively invasive surveillance techniques. But, as NBC reports, a lot of that information came the way you might snoop on your significant others' email: He stole some poor sap's password.

The report cites a recently revealed memo (PDF) that claims Snowden convinced a civilian employee with a higher security clearance to enter his password onto Snowden's computer. A password that Snowden swiped, and used to gain access to classified information. The duped employee, according to NBC, has since resigned.


Edward Snowden Tricked NSA Coworkers into Giving Him Their Passwords
New details are emerging about how Edward Snowden gained access to the classified NSA documents he would later leak to the press, and boy are they… Read…

The memo also sheds more light on previous reports that Snowden had used the passwords of "20 to 25" fellow NSA employees to gain breadth of access that enabled him to become perhaps the most impactful whistleblower in American history.

This particular revelation is also important because Snowden had previously seemed to deny reports that he had lifted passwords from coworkers. The memo also implicates an active member of the U.S. military and an NSA contractor as having aided Snowden in his efforts to expose agency overreac
 

WaddupDoe!

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WaddupDoe!?
scaledphpserver696filen.png
 

BillCosbyAteMyHomework

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Comcast Is Buying Time Warner Cable to Make Big Cable Even Worse
Time Warner Cable is getting swallowed by the only monster bigger than itself: Comcast. That means the biggest cable provider, Comcast, is buying the second biggest cable provider, Time Warner Cable, to form a ridiculously ginormous cable company that'll deliver unsatisfying service under one iron fist. We should all hold each other as big cable just gets bigger and badder.

The NY Times is reporting that Comcast is going to announce an all stock deal to snag TWC worth $44 billion. It's a bit unexpected since the rumor mill had pointed to Charter trying to buy TWC out but it looks like the big shark in the tank (that would be Comcast) bit first.

CNN reports that Comcast and TWC both expect the acquisition to pass through the magnifying glass of the government and hope to get the deal done by the end of the year. If this deal does end up happening, TWC's 12 million cable customers (a lot of them in big cities like NYC and LA) will be added to Comcast's 23 million full Rolodex. That's 35 million subscribers, which is more than a tenth of the US population.

Of course, when you're dealing with two heavyweight buffoons trying to form Voltron like this (or whatever the incompetent version of Voltron would be) in the same industry, you're bound to run into some antitrust issues from the regulators and screams of monopolies by people like us. The powers that be will definitely have their say in this deal so even though the billions are being flashed around right now, nothing is done done yet. Remember, AT&T tried to buy T-Mobile and got shot down by the government. That could theoretically happen again.

But make no mistake, it's clear that Comcast wants to get bigger. It's unclear what that'll mean for the rest of us.
 

kp404

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Edward Snowden Got a Bunch of NSA Info By Stealing a Coworker's Password
It's fun to imagine the spy games that must have been involved in Edward Snowden's exposure of the NSA's massively invasive surveillance techniques. But, as NBC reports, a lot of that information came the way you might snoop on your significant others' email: He stole some poor sap's password.

The report cites a recently revealed memo (PDF) that claims Snowden convinced a civilian employee with a higher security clearance to enter his password onto Snowden's computer. A password that Snowden swiped, and used to gain access to classified information. The duped employee, according to NBC, has since resigned.


Edward Snowden Tricked NSA Coworkers into Giving Him Their Passwords
New details are emerging about how Edward Snowden gained access to the classified NSA documents he would later leak to the press, and boy are they… Read…

The memo also sheds more light on previous reports that Snowden had used the passwords of "20 to 25" fellow NSA employees to gain breadth of access that enabled him to become perhaps the most impactful whistleblower in American history.

This particular revelation is also important because Snowden had previously seemed to deny reports that he had lifted passwords from coworkers. The memo also implicates an active member of the U.S. military and an NSA contractor as having aided Snowden in his efforts to expose agency overreac

Repped:smugcastro:

@BangerzAOTY :ashameddude: cry me a river....
 

kp404

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BangerzAOTY

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hated on for being real..real nikkas take notes and don't say what you mean and mean what you say in this section.
 

Chill

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im not hangin shyt up, this dude actually trolled the shyt out of my threads and aint nothin happened..whatever mod is on duty up in here enjoys fukkshyt, so Imma keep being real til they ban me

Complaining about mods, be grateful you got this far. If mods were like other forums you would have been banned from the jump.
 
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BillCosbyAteMyHomework

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Graphene's Newest Trick Is Fighting Deadly Blood Clots
ku-xlarge.jpg
SEXPAND

Man, graphene is shaping up to be a real wonder-material (if it can make it out of the lab andinto the real world). Chalk up another future use: a coating that eliminates blood clotting in medical devices by kickstarting the body's natural clot-fighting mechanism that lasts way longer than anti-clotting drugs. Cool!


New Form of Graphene Should Finally Make Graphene Electronics Possible
F0r years, scientists have struggled to build graphene-based electronics that could do the same thing as silicon superconductor chips. A new… Read…


IBM's Graphene Circuit: A Genius Reminder of How Far Graphene Has to Go
IBM's mad scientists have created a graphene-based circuit that's 10,000 times more powerful than existing alternatives. This radio… Read…

In a paper published in this week's Nature Communications, researchers explained how molecules of hemin and an enzyme called glucose oxidase can be mounted on a one-atom-thick graphene lattice. When it contacts the blood stream, the active molecules in this coating react with sugars in the blood to kick off production of nitroxyl, a substance with natural anti-clotting properties.

So what's the benefit of this wonder-coating? In testing, a plastic film coated with this material effectively eliminated clotting for three days—by comparison, standard anti-clotting drugs require multiple doses a day to maintain therapeutically effective levels. Controlling clot formation on synthetic surfaces, like artificial heart valves or the tubing used for dialysis, is a major concern. Effectively blocking clotting with a super-thin coating that doesn't need to be replenished could mean less complications and a reduced need for blood thinning drugs.

Of course, as with all things graphene, there's a long road separating the laboratory from general use. You won't be seeing graphene-coated medical equipment any time in the near future. But if this technique pans out, perhaps every hospital device will pack the power of graphene. [Nature Communications via TheScientist]
 
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