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Eunice Vincent

Warning, Your Cell Phone May Be Hazardous To Your Health: Gear + Gadgets: GQ - 2 views

  • Earlier this winter, I met an investment banker who was diagnosed with a brain tumor five years ago. He's a managing director at a top Wall Street firm, and I was put in touch with him through a colleague who knew I was writing a story about the potential dangers of cell-phone radiation. He agreed to talk with me only if his name wasn't used, so I'll call him Jim. He explained that the tumor was located just behind his right ear and was not immediately fatal—the five-year survival rate is about 70 percent. He was 35 years old at the time of his diagnosis and immediately suspected it was the result of his intense cell-phone usage. "Not for nothing," he said, "but in investment banking we've been using cell phones since 1992, back when they were the Gordon-Gekko-on-the-beach kind of phone." When Jim asked his neurosurgeon, who was on the staff of a major medical center in Manhattan, about the possibility of a cell-phone-induced tumor, the doctor responded that in fact he was seeing more and more of such cases—young, relatively healthy businessmen who had long used their phones obsessively. He said he believed the industry had discredited studies showing there is a risk from cell phones. "I got a sense that he was pissed off," Jim told me. A handful of Jim's colleagues had already died from brain cancer; the more reports he encountered of young finance guys developing tumors, the more certain he felt that it wasn't a coincidence. "I knew four or five people just at my firm who got tumors," Jim says. "Each time, people ask the question. I hear it in the hallways." It's hard to talk about the dangers of cell-phone radiation without sounding like a conspiracy theorist. This is especially true in the United States, where non-industry-funded studies are rare, where legislation protecting the wireless industry from legal challenges has long been in place, and where our lives have been so thoroughly integrated with wireless technology that to suggest it might be a problem—maybe, eventually, a very big public-health problem—is like saying our shoes might be killing us.
    • Eunice Vincent
       
      This is the part of this article i will use as the stimulus
Maliha Rahman

Background on Phishing Attacks-(The Honeynet Project) - 1 views

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    This is a page of the honeynet project. It discusses the history of phishing and how it has developed since 1990. How it has affected businesses and how it's popularity has increased. It also discusses the technology part behind the phishing attacks.
Elvira Russ

Phishing attack nets 3 million euros of carbon permits (BBC) - 0 views

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    Online criminals have created fake carbon registries and managed to steal permits worth 3 million euros.
Jeff Ratliff

Google Buzz 'breaks privacy laws' (BBC News) - 0 views

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    A leading privacy group has urged US regulators to investigate Google's new social networking service Buzz, one week after its launch. The Electronic Privacy Information Centre (Epic) has made its complaint to the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) It says that Buzz - which is part of Google's Gmail service - is "deceptive" and breaks consumer protection law.
Chalana Perera

Stimulus: Laptop for every pupil in Uruguay - 0 views

  • The total figure represents less than 5% of the country's education budget.
  • Linux operating
  • particularly those in rural areas, where many still do not have internet access
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • some teachers have chosen not to include computer-related work in their lesson plans
  • last two years 362,000 pupils and 18,000 teachers
Elvira Russ

Assistive Technologies (assistivetechnology.com) - 0 views

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    This article describes Independence One, which is Donald J Dalton's biggest achievement. It discusses what the device is capable and how it helps individuals with different kinds of disabilities.
anonymous

Worst "Spam Gang" - (BBC News) - 0 views

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    This article is about a group of people, (gang) sending out emails that marketed various pills which the gang claimed were generic versions of US-branded and licensed medications. However, they were actually imported from India, unapproved and "potentially unsafe" according to authorities.
Elvira Russ

The problem before the high tech new solution of scanning - 0 views

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    The surprisingly hi-tech system behind Google's controversial scheme to scan millions of books has finally come to light
Elvira Russ

Authors sue Google over copyright - Times Online - 1 views

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    An organisation of more than 8,000 authors has accused Google of "massive copyright infringement," claiming that the internet search engine does not have permission to put its books in the public domain for commercial. This article includes comments from Google and which libraries have agreed. Discusses the issue thoroughly.
Rafae Wathra

Google Zooms In Too Close for Some (New York Times) - 0 views

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    This is about how many users were surprised by the details of google street view (ex. image of cat). They believe this means they have to close blinds. Some license plate numbers were readable and illegal areas were photographed.
Jeff Ratliff

Apple + iPad + Huxley = Orwellian nightmare (Guardian) - 1 views

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    "WATCHING STEVE JOBS unveil the Apple iPad, what came to mind was something that Neil Postman, the most influential media critic since Marshall McLuhan, once said. Our future possibilities, Postman thought, lay on a spectrum bounded by George Orwell at one end, and by Aldous Huxley at the other: Orwell because he believed that we would be destroyed by the things we fear; Huxley because he thought that we would be undone by the things we love. As the internet went mainstream, the Orwellian nightmare has evolved into a realistic possibility, because of the facilities the network offers for the comprehensive surveillance so vividly evoked in 1984. Governments everywhere have helped themselves to powers to read every email or text you've ever sent. And that's just the democracies; authoritarian regimes are far more intrusive."
Mahmud Shihab

Advanced Distributed Learning - What Is SCORM - 2 views

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    SCORM is a collection of specifications and standards used as a "reference model" of interrelated technical specifications for Web-based learning content and systems.
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