Archive for the 'Social Network' Category

Before the gunfire, cyberattacks

International Herald Tribune - Published: August 13, 2008

iht.com graphic, A screen grab of the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Web site, mfa.gov.ge, which had been defaced by the

By John Markoff

Weeks before bombs started falling on Georgia, a security researcher in suburban Massachusetts was watching an attack against the country in cyberspace.

Jose Nazario of Arbor Networks in Lexington noticed a stream of data directed at Georgian government sites containing the message: “win+love+in+Rusia.”

Other Internet experts in the United States said the attacks against Georgia’s Internet infrastructure began as early as July 20, with coordinated barrages of millions of requests — known as distributed denial of service, or DDOS, attacks — that overloaded and effectively shut down Georgian servers.

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Some Web sites remain blocked at Beijing Olympics

AP - Sat Aug 9, 9:55 AM ET

BEIJING - Some Web sites remained inaccessible to reporters as competition got under way Saturday at the Beijing Olympics.

By STEPHEN WADE, AP Sports Writer

onestopreview.com graphic, web block spider imageChina’s communist government routinely filters its citizens’ access to the Internet, but in the runup to the Olympics Chinese officials and officials with the International Olympic Committee vowed there would be no censorship of the Internet for accredited journalists covering the games.

Some sites were unblocked 10 days ago after reporters arriving to cover the games found them blocked and complained to the IOC, but others remain inaccessible, including sites related to the Tiananmen Square protests, Tibet, Taiwan and the Dalai Lama.

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Is Facebook Letting Employees Cash Out?

Sillicon Alley Insider - Peter Kafka | August 4, 2008 3:45 PM

foxnews.comFacebook employees are in an enviable position: Each of them owns a small piece of a company that’s worth billions of dollars, which means each of them is looking at the prospect of a windfall — one day. But until Facebook sells or goes public — and neither prospect looks imminent — it’s hard for them to do much with their paper wealth.

Solution: Create a way for employees to sell a small portion of their shares at a pre-determined price. That’s what VentureBeat’s Eric Eldon says Facebook intends to do: He says workers will be able to sell up to 20% of their vested equity, at a $4 billion valuation this fall.

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How much information is too much?

International Herald Tribune - Published: August 3, 2008

By Brad Stone

kiiitv.com graphic, arrested imageWant to vet a baby sitter? Need to peek into the background of a prospective employee? Curious about the past of a potential date?

Last month, PeopleFinders, a 20-year-old company based in California, introduced CriminalSearches.com, a free service to satisfy those common impulses. The site, which is supported by advertising, lets people search by name through criminal archives of all 50 states and 3,500 counties in the United States. In the process, it just might upset a sensitive social balance once preserved by the difficulty of obtaining public documents like criminal records.

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Location-Based Mobile Social Networking: A $3.3 Billion Market In 5 Years?

Sillicon Alley Insider - Dan Frommer | August 1, 2008 10:48 AM

SAI graphic, location based social network imageLocation-based mobile social networking is just getting started in the U.S., and there’s a lot of hype surrounding it. But will that hype turn into dollars?

Research firm ABI Research predicts the nascent industry will turn into a $3.3 billion market worldwide by 2013. Where will that money come from? Location-based mobile advertising “holds a lot of promise,” notes ABI analyst Dominique Bonte, in a statement. But “the current reality” suggests licensing and subscription revenue-sharing — like Loopt’s recent deal with Verizon Wireless — the most likely near-term revenue streams.

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Don’t Cry for Us, Silicon Valley

BUSINESSWEEK - Valley Girl August 1, 2008, 12:01AM EST

Despite the media’s anxiety about fallen female executives, women are actually advancing in high technology

by Sarah Lacy

photobucket.com photo, women crying imageThere are so few women running technology companies that when one steps down, it’s inevitable that we women in Silicon Valley will be confronted by hand-wringing over the lack of female leadership in the tech sector.

The soul-searching resurfaced on July 29, when Patricia Russo stepped down as CEO of telecom equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent (ALU)—much as it emerged in the wake of other recent executive exits: Diane Greene, ousted in July as CEO of virtualization software maker VMware (VMW), and Meg Whitman, who left e-commerce giant eBay (EBAY) earlier this year. Let’s not forget the high-profile departures of Carly Fiorina from Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) in 2005 and Carol Bartz, who left Autodesk (ADSK) in 2006.

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Why Google Isn’t Spending $200 Million On Digg

Sillicon Alley Insider -  Howard Lindzon | July 26, 2008 10:40 PM

post-buzz.com graphics, Google spending imageThe price is wrong.

Digg is truly the most useless of the big Web 2.0 sites. It won’t make you money and it can’t make money. Its early investors and founder will make money, and if they pull off a sale, management and the founders will have done their job.

Digg has tried to Digg their ‘acquisition’ for almost two years. TechCrunch usually delivers the news. Yawn. The whole strategy is not horrible as the media companies don’t budge until they hear that someone else has shown interest. If it does not work the first few times though, you end up stale.

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