Netflix to stream all Star Trek episodes |
- Netflix to stream all Star Trek episodes
- Convicted hacker Gonzalez says he was authorized by Secret Service to commit his crimes
- Mozilla wants to release Firefox 5 before June 21st
- 'Anonymous' to boycott Sony stores next week
- YouTube starts live streaming site
Netflix to stream all Star Trek episodes Posted: 09 Apr 2011 02:32 PM PDT Netflix has confirmed today that all Star Trek series will be available for streaming starting in July. The deal with CBS was first announced in February and includes other library hits like Frasier and Twin Peaks. For fans of the show, the available series will be Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise. Deep Space 9 will launch later than the rest, on October 1st. Star Trek and Enterprise will be available in HD. The deal is U.S. only and will last for two years. Voyager fans will likely be the happiest of the bunch, as the series has never been available digitally, not even through iTunes, explains TrekMovie.com. |
Convicted hacker Gonzalez says he was authorized by Secret Service to commit his crimes Posted: 09 Apr 2011 01:12 PM PDT Currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for his role in stealing and reselling over 170 million credit and ATM card numbers, Albert Gonzalez has flipped on his guilty plea and is now claiming that the U.S. government authorized him to commit the crimes he was convicted for. Gonzalez now wants to withdraw his guilty plea and wants a court to vacate his sentence. Additionally, the hacker blames his lawyers for not "properly representing him" and not appealing his sentence like he requested them to do. The hacker stole the credit card numbers using sql injection and packet sniffer malware software to create backdoors into the corporate systems of retailer chains TJX Companies, BJ's Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Boston Market, Barnes & Noble, Sports Authority and Dave & Buster's. Gonazalez and two other conspirators also used wardriving, hacking using accessible Wi-Fi in retail stores. One of the conspirators is 7-foot-tall Stephen Watt, a Morgan Stanley investment banker who wrote the sniffing programs. The three hackers would then sell the numbers or encode the data onto magnetic strips of blank ATM cards, using them to withdraw thousands of dollars from ATM machines. In September, 2009, Gonazalez was sentenced for 20 counts of identity theft, wire fraud, computer fraud and conspiracy that led to $200 million in losses for banks, insurers and retail companies. At the time of his arrest Gonzalez forfeited his Miami condo, a 2006 BMW 330i, thousands of dollars in jewelry and $2.7 million USD in cash. Gonzalez now claims that all of his crimes were done with the direction of the U.S. Secret Service, who employed Gonzalez to go undercover into hacking rings and set up members. In his latest petition, the hackers says he believes he "was authorized to engage in the cyber crimes I was participating in, in order to gather intelligence on National and International cyber criminals and I was doing my job to the best of my abilities." |
Mozilla wants to release Firefox 5 before June 21st Posted: 09 Apr 2011 12:40 PM PDT Facing ever-increasing competition from Google's Chrome and even Microsoft's Internet Explorer, Mozilla has announced that it will be moving to a more aggressive timetable for its Firefox browser, with Firefox 5 expected before June 21st. Firefox 4 was released just last month, after over a year of development and delays. Even more shockingly, Mozilla expects to release Firefox 6 just 60 days later, at the end of August. Following in Chrome's footsteps, Mozilla is moving to a faster development cycle. Despite being released in 2008, Chrome is already in version 11 (beta for users) and version 12 (beta for developers). Chrome uses four-channels to continually add features to Chrome, "nightly," "dev," "beta" and "stable." Because of this, there is a new version of Chrome (usually) every two months. CW explains what Mozilla will need to do to meet the tight deadlines: "Mozilla will add features to Firefox as it goes. If a feature is not ready for the first of the four channels -- what the company calls "nightlies" as well as "Mozilla central" -- it will not be added later to the aurora or beta builds. Features with problems will be backed out of an edition -- say Firefox 5 -- and deferred until the next in line." NetApplications reveals browser market share as follows: Internet Explorer at 56 percent, Firefox at 21.80 percent and Chrome at 11.57 percent. |
'Anonymous' to boycott Sony stores next week Posted: 09 Apr 2011 12:25 PM PDT The hacking group 'Anonymous,' which recently stopped its attack on PSN and other Sony services, has said this week that it will stage a 24-hour boycott at Sony stores around the world next week, Saturday, April 16th. On the Facebook page, there are over 1000 RSVPs for the event. Over the last week, Anonymous used DDoS attacks to take down the PSN and a few individual Sony employees. The attack was stopped after the group decided it was hurting the Sony consumers they were trying to avenge. You can read Anonymous's full letter to concerned PSN users here: 'Anonymous' stops its assault on PSN The group is pissed at Sony for its lawsuit against Geohot and its criminalization of users who even click on info related to PS3 custom firmware and homebrew. Geohot opened up the console to homebrew by running 'jailbreak code' and creating a custom firmware for version 3.55. |
YouTube starts live streaming site Posted: 09 Apr 2011 12:08 PM PDT YouTube has started its live streaming service this weekend, available at http://www.youtube.com/live. The service will allow users to stream live broadcasts, and Google itself is advertising Indian Premier League Cricket and the upcoming Mortal Kombat live stream. Google says it will keep rolling out the platform to YouTube partners with "accounts in good standing." "The goal is to provide thousands of partners with the capability to live stream from their channels in the months ahead. In order to ensure a great live stream viewing experience, we'll roll this offering out incrementally over time," concluded YouTube. |
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