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Showing posts with label Cyber News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyber News. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Secret NWO Island Headquarters Discovered

Secret NWO Island Headquarters Discovered At 'The Last Place On Earth'?

 

By Stefan Stanford - All News Pipeline - Live Free Or Die

Despite being the most remote location upon the planet Earth, completely uninhabited according to the CIA's World Factbook, the subantarctic volcanic island called 'Bouvet Island' is home to the top-level internet country domain code .bv and is located in the direct vicinity of several recent unsolved mysteries as outlined in the story and 1st 3 videos below. The facts we've uncovered lead us to believe a secret island headquarters of the New World Order has been discovered in one of the most remote regions on the planet that is also the home to an ongoing series of internet cyber warfare attacks being launched across the world as well as a HAARP control point for the NWO's nefarious electronic warfare. 


Monday, March 2, 2015

Google Ranking Web Pages By Facts Not Links

(I surely don't want Google determining what is the truth. I object to this. ~ GNC)

Google Researchers Are Ranking Web Pages By Facts Not Links



Internet searches may be based on algorithmic rigour—but that doesn't necessarily guarantee the quality of a suggested page. Now, a team of Google researchers has developed a method that sorts results by factual content rather than how well linked a page is.

While Google's search algorithms are complex, they still use the number of incoming links to a web page as the main arbiter of quality. The more linked-to a page, the better it is and the higher it appears in your results. It's a technique pleasing in its (seeming) simplicity. But if a lot of people link to an awful page it can find itself at the top of the pile—even though it's not really useful.

A team of Google researchers has developed a new way to rank pages, called Knowledge-Based Trust score. The system's not live—or, indeed, likely to be, at least for a little while—but it is is intriguing. Essentially, it provides results by counting the number of incorrect facts within a page, reports New Scientist.

It does that by looking up content and comparing it to Google's Knowledge Vault, a store of facts that have been pulled off of the Internet. The Vault is a pool of facts that are broadly agreed on online, which is judged by the researchers to count as proxy for truth. If web pages contain information that contradicts the Vault, they slide down the ranking.

It's not the first algorithm to try and judge truth online—there's a browser extension called LazyTruth that tries to identify hoax emails, for instance—but applying it to search is a new and interesting concept. Perhaps the biggest question mark, though, is the accuracy of the Vault used to look up what's right and what's not. How do you feel about having results served to you based on the Truth According to Google? [arXiv via New Scientist]

Image by AP

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Apple Partners with the Government on Cybersecurity

Friday, President Obama ​announced a cybersecurity executive order that would allow the government and private companies to exchange information about potential hacking and terrorism threats. Google and Facebook declined to send its CEOs to an event pitching the order. Apple CEO Tim Cook, meanwhile, used the opportunity to pitch his products.

Cook positioned Apple as the more privacy-minded rival to Google and Facebook. He said Apple, which has clashed with the government in the past over encryption, doesn’t sell content from users’ email to advertisers or monetize any information stored on the iCloud. He also announced that Apple would partner with the government to expand the use of Apple Pay, its digital wallet service that links mobile devices with payment systems.

“When we ask you for data, it’s to improve our services, and even then, you have a choice of what info you want to share,” he said. “We set the industry's highest standards, and we are committed to living up to them.”

Cook’s statements hinted at tensions between major technology companies and the US government over spying practices. He said privacy is the “difference between life and death” for some.

“If those of us in positions of responsibility fail to do everything in our power to protect the right of privacy, we risk something far more valuable than money,” he said. “We risk our way of life.” 


Sunday, February 15, 2015

$1 Billion Stolen by Hackers from Banks, Biggest Breach Known

Hackers Steal Up To $1 Billion From Banks

| By MAE ANDERSON
Posted: 02/15/2015 2:06 pm EST Updated: 5 hours ago 




NEW YORK (AP) — A hacking ring has stolen up to $1 billion from banks around the world in what would be one of the biggest banking breaches known, a cybersecurity firm says in a report scheduled to be delivered Monday.

The hackers have been active since at least the end of 2013 and infiltrated more than 100 banks in 30 countries, according to Russian security company Kaspersky Lab.

After gaining access to banks' computers through phishing schemes and other methods, they lurk for months to learn the banks' systems, taking screen shots and even video of employees using their computers, the company says.