by Cory Doctorow on (#158FY)
The remote access Leaf app has been recalled by Nissan, more than a month after researchers went to the company to report that they could remotely drain the battery and download the log of all the car's movements. (more…)
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Updated | 2024-11-26 18:33 |
by Cory Doctorow on (#1588D)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EtHOmforqxkCardinal George Pell presided over decades of horrific abuse of Australian children by his clergy; now the active, vigorous crime-boss says he's too weak to return to Australia from the Vatican to attend a commission on the crimes, meaning that he won't have to confront the survivors of the abuse he abetted. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#1586P)
People who spent years, even decades, behind bars in California's prisons before being exonerated are not entitled to any services or compensation, not even the normal reintegration counselling, funding and services made available to parolees and criminals who've served their time. (more…)
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by Boing Boing's Store on (#1573F)
It doesn’t always fit. Sometimes you’ve got a bunch of movies, a library full of music, or maybe that novel you’ve been working on or those photos from that one weekend that you just can’t ever delete because maybe someday you’ll bribe your friends. The point is, you have a lot of data and need to store it all somewhere. The iKlips iOS Flash Drives come in 32, 64, and 128GB versions and can take your crucial data and squish it all up into a lightweight and sleek metallic device. Just like that.Simply plug one of these little powerhouses into any USB slot and move data to and from any compatible device. You can access any kind of media from movies and TV shows to pictures, documents and music, and even have the option to stream that media when the drive is plugged in. Forget wasting any more of your device’s precious space or getting that annoying “Not enough storage†message. They're even made of ultra thin aluminum so you can keep it in your pocket or bag without any added weight.Never be without your important documents again. Want to show off your portfolio at a job interview? Let someone listen to your favorite album? Show your family the photo slideshow from your latest trip? Let it rip with the flick of your fingertips when you pop the top off this little flash drive, which you can nab for up to 22% off now. Check out the link below for more details.Save up to 22% on the iKlips iOS Flash Drives in the Boing Boing Store.
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by Cory Doctorow on (#156EP)
Since 2001, authoritarians in the South Korean government have been attempting to pass mass surveillance legislation, and they have seized upon the latest North Korean saber-rattling as the perfect excuse for ramming it through the SK Parliament. (more…)
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by Peter Sheridan on (#1562K)
[My friend Peter Sheridan is a Los Angeles-based correspondent for British national newspapers. He has covered revolutions, civil wars, riots, wildfires, and Hollywood celebrity misdeeds for longer than he cares to remember. As part of his job, he must read all the weekly tabloids. For the past couple of years, he's been posting terrific weekly tabloid recaps on Facebook and has graciously given us permission to run them on Boing Boing. Enjoy! - Mark]Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was “murdered by a hooker,†reports the National Enquirer, while Robert Wagner finally gave a “murder confession†admitting to slaying Natalie Wood, according to the Globe.Only one small detail is missing from these stories. Facts.They have as much plausibility as the two women who tell this week's Enquirer that they had babies following sex romps with space aliens (expect Donald Trump and Ted Cruz to call for the infants’ deportation), and the 17th century English prophet Thomas Totney’s predictions of space travel reported (belatedly, some might say) in the Examiner.The facts: Scalia suffered from coronary artery disease, diabetes and other ailments, routinely slept with a breathing apparatus and was propped up on three pillows when he died, according to his family and police, who found Scalia's bedsheets crisp with no sign of a struggle, though a pillow had slipped down over the top of his head, but not enough to obstruct his airway.But because Scalia’s family rejected an autopsy the Enquirer assumes a cover-up, reporting that a “2,000-a-night†prostitute employed by the CIA "injected Scalia with a needle filled with poison in his buttocks†in a bid to reshape the Supreme Court.Let’s think about this for one second. If you are the CIA, why would you employ a hooker - at any price - to kill a Supreme Court justice, when you have legions of trained operatives who could do the task more efficiently? Scalia died at an $800-a-night suite in a Texas ranch, while “just days before†across the border a “CIA spy†was seen visiting a Mexican brothel “looking for a girl to keep an older VIP gentleman company,†says the Enquirer. So now we’re to believe that the CIA not only recruited a hooker as its killer, but went to Mexico to find one, because everyone knows that Mexican border bordellos have the best-trained killer-hookers if you ever need a Supreme Court Justice lethally injected in the backside?Their source? “An insider at the El Toreo Bar in Ojinaga, Mexico.†Sounds like an unimpeachable source to me.As for Robert Wagner, I’m beginning to feel genuine sympathy for this man who finds himself accused of murdering his wife almost every single week in the tabloids. This week the Globe and Enquirer teamed up to ambush Wagner, having Natalie Wood’s sister Lana confront him demanding answers while a video camera rolled.“Robert Wagner confesses,†states the Globe. “Wagner unwittingly revealed he murdered his movie-siren wife,†reports the Enquirer.So what exactly did Wagner confess to? Absolutely nothing. Assailed outside an awards ceremony honoring his wife, Jill St John, when asked why he wouldn’t speak with detectives - having spoken to them repeatedly for years in the past - an understandably upset Wagner replied: “Why would you even bring up anything like that? . . . I have talked to everybody . . . You have accused me of murdering her.â€How is this a confession? The tabloids call upon the services of “top body language expert Susan Constantine†to watch the video and conclude that Wagner is “concealing information,†and that by calling Natalie Wood “her†instead of using her name, Wagner is distancing himself from his deceased wife in the same way that killers try to dissociate themselves from their victims.And that’s what passes for a “murder confession†in the world of the tabloids. I think even a Saudi Arabian court might throw out that piece of evidence.In other Enquirer revelations, Paul McCartney’s “friends†fear he is battling Alzheimer’s disease as the 73-year-old admits that he can’t remember the lyrics to every song he ever wrote (as if anyone could); Nicole Kidman is caught in a passionate clinch with Alexander Skarsgard that the Enquirer assures will drive her husband Keith Urban “crazy†- at least, until he realizes it’s just a scene from their latest movie; and Johnny Depp is at the center of a “murder mystery,†which turns out to be the disappearance of a business partner 14 years ago, which the police label as a “missing person’s case†and not a murder.The Globe continues its incisive political coverage by reporting “The Pope Is A Dope†for branding their beloved Donald Trump un-Christian in his desire to build a border wall.The Examiner reports on the “sad last days†of Michael Douglas, Jack Nicholson, Richard Dreyfuss, Ryan O’Neal, Valerie Harper and Joanne Woodward, because apparently once you’re over 72 you’re living on borrowed time and by definition must be miserable.Fortunately we have the celebrity magazines to bring us cheer. Us magazine’s cover boasts Kim Kardashian telling hubby Kanye West “You need therapy†(didn’t we all know that, anyway?), Lea Michelle’s “devastating breakup,†and Taylor Swift’s “angry feud†with Demi Lovato. Wait - that’s all truly depressing.Elizabeth Taylor’s “intimate secrets†and “never before seen photos†claim the cover of People magazine, though a photo of Taylor in a kitchen and sunbathing on a yacht hardly seem earth-shattering, while the “secret†that she once hitchhiked for a lark in an upscale beach resort sheds little light on her complex personality - and that’s the biggest “secret†exposed.Us mag reveals that Kendall Jenner wore it best, Yoko Ono admits to wearing sunglasses everywhere, “even in the theatre,†singer Santigold stuffs her purse with sneakers, lip salve, keys, and a Labradorite rock that “prevents negative energy,†and the stars are just like us: they practice yoga, carry gifts and decorate cakes.Headline honors of the week go to the Globe for “Seal Begs Heidi: Klum Back To Me!â€We should have seen that kluming.Onwards and downwards . . .
by Rob Beschizza on (#155RD)
Brent Underwood uploaded an ebook, comprising of a photo of his foot, to Amazon. He sold 3 copies and was an Amazon Bestseller. tl;dr: avoid the busy categories.
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#155RF)
Spider-Man made his debut in Marvel Comics' Amazing Fantasy #15 (1962). This week, a near-mint copy sold for $454,100 at Heritage’s Comics & Comic Art Signature Auction.A copy of Amazing Fantasy #15, the 1962 first appearance of Spider-man, sold at Heritage Auctions in Dallas on Feb. 18, 2016 for $454,100, a record price at public auction for the comic. The Near-Mint, 9.4 CGC copy claimed top lot honors in Heritage’s $5.7+ million Comics & Comic Art Signature Auction.The copy was purchased in 1980 by New York area collector Walter Yakaboski, a comic book collector, who had the opportunity to buy a handful of key early Marvel comic books for the very tidy sum of $10,000 – a good bit to spend in those days. Among them was the copy of Amazing Fantasy #15, the landmark first appearance of Spider-Man. The portion of the trove it is figured today they he spent on Spidey is about $1,200.This copy of Amazing Fantasy #15 was not known to the collecting hobby before this auction, as Yakaboski kept it almost perfectly preserved in a safe deposit box for 35 years. The book was purchased by an anonymous collector. Another Spider-Man comic from Yakaboski’s collection drew serious attention as a 1963 copy of The Amazing Spider-Man #1 sold for $110,537. “It’s a superbly preserved copy of one of the most sought-after comic books in the world,†said Lon Allen, Managing Director of the Comics Department at Heritage. “It’s worth well more than its weight in gold. There are very few like this one.â€I don't like super hero comics after 1972 or so, but I love Silver Age comics. Look at this great John Romita cover for Spider-Man #62 (1968) , which sold for $179,250 at auction:Here's a fun video about the auction:https://youtu.be/LaNNu6KXtw4
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by David Pescovitz on (#155BY)
Kamasi Washington -- the incredible saxophonist and composer who is carrying the spiritual jazz torch pioneered by the likes of John Coltrane, Pharaoh Sanders, and Albert Ayler -- is in San Francisco today (Thursday, 2/25) for the Noise Pop Music Festival. You can see Washington interviewed live, FREE, at 3:30pm today at the Swedish American Hall before his two shows at The Independent. (The Independent shows are sold out but you can still get in by purchasing a Noise Pop badge, which also is your entry into dozens of other killer concerts this week.)Some years ago, when Kamasi Washington was a teenager, Birdman Records owner David Katznelson heard about his band, The Young Jazz Giants, signed them and took them into the studio. The self-titled debut record came out the following year and the four members of the group still play together today, in fact were featured on THE EPIC. The interview would discuss the founding of the Young Jazz Giants, with focus on Billy Higgins, the recording of that record and the path from there to the Epic. RSVP to Kamasi Washington Live Interviewhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVE-HwW31hU
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#1559X)
Objects of Desire: A Showcase of Modern Erotic Products and the Creative Minds Behind Them by Rita Catinella Orrell is a coffee table book that has photos of 100 design-centric sex toys and interviews with their designers. The cover features Crave's hit Vesper vibrator.Design website Core77 interviewed the author, Rita Catinella Orrell about Objects of Desire, which out March 28 from Schiffer Publishing.
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by Cory Doctorow on (#1550Z)
Matt Taibbi is one of our decade's best observers of corruption and abuses of power, combining careful research with flamboyant, HS Thompson-esque verbal pyrotechnics, an absolute gift for coinages (Goldman Sachs will never fully shed his description of the firm as "a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money"), matched by real insight into the American political psyche. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#15506)
The spawn of Russia's 0.0001% are alive and well, enjoying police escorts, helicopters, ski resorts, private jets, gold-plated Bentleys, megayachts, luxury wristwatches, pet lion cubs, photo opps with Vladimir Putin, and their own Instagram account. Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Баршаңызға Ñәлем #RRK из Майами, летим туÑить😎 У кого ÐºÐ°ÐºÐ°Ñ Ð¿Ð¾Ð³Ð¾Ð´ÐºÐ° ÑейчаÑ?😉ðŸšâ˜€ï¸ðŸ‡ºðŸ‡¸ - by @maks_rr_ w/ @muratx01 #RichRussianKids #helicopter #miami A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 20, 2016 at 8:14am PST МоÑковÑкое Ð²Ñ€ÐµÐ¼Ñ 120ðŸ‹â‚½, получше твоих паленых g шоков😂💸⌚ï¸ðŸ” - by @invisible #RRK #RichRussianKids #hublot #ulyssenardin #rogerdubius #louismoinet #urwerk #greubelforsey A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 20, 2016 at 3:24am PST Чего там на #RRK нового, ищу компанию на лето😂💸ðŸŽðŸ‡®ðŸ‡¹ - by @ml_max #RichRussianKids #mclaren #650s #italy A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 18, 2016 at 1:12am PST Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Кто там Ñказал понедельник день Ñ‚Ñжёлый?😂💸🇺🇸ðŸ¾ðŸ‘¯ - by @alexander_dgr8 #RRK #RichRussianKids #audi #r8 #armanddebrignac #domperignon #villa #la A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Feb 15, 2016 at 12:05am PST Summer '15 #tb ☀ï¸ðŸ›¥ðŸº - by @papa__doma #rrk #RichRussianKids #yacht #corona A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Dec 23, 2015 at 6:56am PST GM Miami🇺🇸 - by @polinaaam #rrk #RichRussianKids #miami A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Dec 23, 2015 at 2:11am PST Yacht day☀ï¸ðŸ›¥ - @anastasiyakot #rrk #RichRussianKids #yacht #mauritius #girls A photo posted by 🇷🇺 Rich Russian Kids (@richrussiankids) on Dec 13, 2015 at 1:23am PST
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by David Pescovitz on (#154YN)
Religious paraphernalia -- from gilded goblets to huge Jesus statues to "high-tech" electronic rosaries -- is a $5 billion business. The International Exhibition of Church Furnishings, Liturgical Items and Religious Building Components, held in the north east of Italy, is like the CES of religion. Photographer Louis de Belle captured the high weirdness in a beautifully strange series "detaching for a moment all of (religion's) paraphernalia from the notion of faith." "This trade fair's functional infrastructure, stocked with clergy apparel, liturgical items and cult objects, becomes the backdrop of a "counter–reality" made of bored salesmen, busy nuns and misplaced items," de Belle writes. "A last supper is hanging before a modest refreshment, agonising crucifixes are being quickly deposited, while industrious sisters do their business."See more of the series: Besides FaithBuy the "Besides Faith" book.Read an interview with de Belle in Wired.
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by Cory Doctorow on (#154GM)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZqiF5Duh0U&feature=youtu.beInsecure desktop operating systems (and even server/CMS vulnerabilities) has led to the creation of enormous, powerful botnets comprised of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of machines -- and thanks to the law of supply and demand, it's remarkably cheap and easy to rent time on a botnet and blast any site of your choosing off the Internet. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#15218)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iU8vXDoBB5sThe outgoing Librarian of Congress was a technophobe who refused all gadgets more advanced than a fax machine; he was in charge of the nation's copyright, and hence its IT policy. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#15162)
Stephan Urbach is part of Telecomix (previously), activists who worked tirelessly to keep the Internet on during the Arab Spring, when endangered despots were killswitching net links in a bid to keep protest from spreading. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#1511F)
The lithium battery pack for a Nagra 6 digital recorder costs $700. Markus Fuller opened one and found out it has a small battery in it (with 6 cells worth a total of $30), and a large sponge. It must be an awesome sponge! As he opens it, he gives an interesting and entertaining lesson on the history of lithium batteries. Caveat emptor: Nagra sells a more expensive battery pack, which contains more batteries, so you won't get as much of the magical sponge if you buy it. Fuller has a good video about capacitors, too:https://youtu.be/ZnG1423AZzU[via]
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by Rob Beschizza on (#1511H)
Donald Trump thrashed his Republican rivals so completely in Nevada's caucus that he won about as many votes as Marc Rubio, Ted Cruz and John Kasich combined. For Republicans hoping it would all go away, the knowledge that even a "consensus candidate" can't prevail is dawning. At The Guardian, Jeb Lund explains that Trump's victories aren't mysterious if you understand why people are angry, which very few people in politics or the media appreciate, even now.But you don’t need some grand overarching political science theory. There are millions of miserable people in America who know exactly who engineered the shattering of their worlds, and Trump isn’t one of those people – and, with the exception of Bernie Sanders, everyone else in the field is running on the basis of their experience being one of those people.When you are abused and bullied enough, anyone willing to beat up or burn down whomever put you in that position is your friend. Even a bully can be a hero if he targets others bullies – and that is, more or less, what Trump has done since day one.At The Federalist, though, Mollie Hemingway blames the media for enabling him and for embracing his awful talking points.They’re complicit. You can’t cry “dangerous and outrageous†with this type of cross-network coverage that other candidates would pay millions of dollars to have. Every day is a test for the media and Trump. And every day they fail, and he succeeds wildly. … It’s not that candidates should get equal time, but let’s not pretend that there was any sense of proportion to the Trump media circus this past year. Trump is a smart campaigner, exploiting each and every weakness in American media for his gain. And his supporters are happy to have him. He’s earned his success. But I’ll be darned if the media want to pretend they didn’t play a huge role in his easy path to the nomination.In any case, conservatives know that whatever the truth of Trump is, they are going to be blamed for it.
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by Futility Closet on (#150ZH)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#150YS)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCOHD2RBsRY&feature=youtu.beSamuel writes, "The mathematics podcast Relatively Prime (previously) is currently running a Kickstarter to fund a third season, this time with monthly episode. The episodes will features stories about how network theory can help better understand cancer, how a marijuana dispensary license lottery is designed, and the act of mathematical vandalism which liberated algebra from the shackles of arithmetic. There really aren't any other mathematics podcasts out there like Relatively Prime and if the Kickstarter is not funded there really won't be any at all." (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#150S8)
Even within the batty realms of North Korea's propaganda, the invective thrown at South Korean President Park Geun-hye is remarkable.In perhaps its lengthiest and harshest verbal attack on Park since she took office in 2013, the North's official Korean Central News Agency on Saturday called her a "tailless, old, insane bitch," a "senile old woman" and a "murderous demon" destined to meet "a sudden and violent death."… North Korea previously called Park a "prostitute" and said she lives on the "groin of her American boss." It has frequently questioned her womanhood because she has no children, which the North labels as an "obligation" for women. North Korea also frequently refers to the "swish of her skirts," a Korean phrase used to describe women seen as overly aggressive."The swishes of Park Geun-hye's skirt, created by her American boss, are so unpredictable they're dumbfounding," an unnamed spokesman of the North's Joint National Organization of Working People said in a statement last year published by the KCNA. "This is all because the United States' black, hairy hands reach deep into Park Geun-hye's skirt."Apart from the absurd sexism, there's a more politically unnerving aspect to it. For all its apparent insanity, North Korea's propaganda traditionally tried to appeal to South Korean leftists. This messaging indicates a new level of ignorance of the world outside, a turning-inwards of its paranoia.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#150QC)
Britain is to hold a referendum on leaving the European Union, and the "Brexit" group—largely represented by the country's nativist UKIP party—have a fabulous music video to promote their cause.Based upon a more charmingly patriotic soccer song by Lightning Seeds, with comedians Frank Skinner and David Baddiel, the new version is genuinely transfixing. It's hard to tell if it's a parody or not; the original artists write that they laughed like drains when they watched it. They want our prisoners to voteThey’ve taken all our fish. And moneyThrough the yearsThere’s endless regulation, red tapeIt seems there’s no escapeTill the leave vote takes shape.UKIP ("U.K. Independence") is often said to tap into the same currents of anger and despair as Donald Trump. Here, for comparison, are the "Trump Girls"…https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XqnE1PnWF4
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by Cory Doctorow on (#150AH)
My latest Guardian column, The FBI wants a backdoor only it can use – but wanting it doesn’t make it possible, draws a connection between vaccine denial, climate denial, and the demand for backdoors in secure systems, as well as the call for technologies that prevent copyright infringement, like DRM. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#15071)
When the Hogwarts kids finally got fed up at the lack of Internet access at school, the administration caved and hired Jonathan Dart, a muggle IT guy, who needs to figure out how to get the wifi working everywhere on campus, even at the bottom of Slytherin's stupid lake (it turns out that Slytherins will help you do this if you show them how to tune in emo music on Spotify). (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#1506H)
General YK Museveni has been president of Uganda for 30 years, presiding over a grinding and brutal civil war as well as a series of far-reaching laws that limit the human rights of Ugandans. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14YKD)
The tainted water that poisoned an entire generation of children in Flint, MI, was the most expensive water in America. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#14YGC)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9MShtCg4fkIf Star Wars were directed by Paul Verhoeven: what the stormtroopers actually march to, far from John Williams' anti-Imperial minor key propaganda.
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14YDR)
Chinese Internet giant Baidu -- a combination between Google, Facebook and Twitter, with key investments in many companies, including Uber -- makes its own Windows/Android browser, long believed to be a de facto surveillance tool. (more…)
by Rose Eveleth on (#14XZZ)
In this episode of the Flash Forward podcast we travel to a future where humans have decided to eradicate the most dangerous animal on the planet: mosquitos. How would we do it? Is it even possible? And what are the consequences?Flash Forward: RSS | iTunes | Twitter | Facebook | Web | PatreonWe talk to experts on mosquito ecology, public health, and a guy who’s trying to genetically engineer mosquitoes to eliminate themselves. We talk about everything from how hard it would be to exterminate mosquitoes, to which species we should target, to what the potential side effects might be. Listen for all that and more!▹▹ Full show notesCheck out all the great podcasts that Boing Boing has to offer!
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14XY3)
The Freewrite started life as a successful Kickstarter campaign and now it's an object of commerce: a $500 keyboard with a sharp frontlit e-ink screen that gets more than a month's use from a full battery. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14XVC)
It's always fun to watch a master craftsperson at work. In this case, we get to observe a watchmaker named Harry service a Omega Speedmaster Professional, which has 234 parts, and costs $3,444 on Amazon.Consider there are significantly more old watches that need service each year than there are new watches that need to be made, and yet the Swiss invest so significantly into watchmakers for creation and yet barely consider after-sales service. In this video, we head up to Manfredi Jewels in Greenwich, CT, to talk about this, and see why now more than ever we need qualified repairmen via a detailed look at servicing one of the most iconic timepieces in history – the Omega Speedmaster Professional. For the full story, go to Hodinkee.Several years ago, when I was editor-in-chief of MAKE, I had the delightful inventor Tim Hunkin write an article about learning to be an amateur watch maker. You can read the article on his blog.
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by Xeni Jardin on (#14XV0)
“Is he going to eat me? I thought he was. Ahhh! I thought he was real! Is he real? Go away. You go away I say, dinosaur.†(more…)
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by Xeni Jardin on (#14XFA)
Two lawmakers are reported to be planning to unveil details of a major encryption bill Wednesday, as the FBI's battle with Apple continues and a debate grows over what role government should play in regulating technology. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14XBP)
This is a terrific 45-minute video profile of actor Crispin Glover, produced by Brandon Hardesty, who makes video profiles about character actors. The series is called No Small Parts. He also made a video about the actors in "It Follows," one of my favorite horror movies:https://youtu.be/npnu_39tN5Q
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14X1R)
Bill Gates has joined Donald Trump in condemning Apple for refusing to backdoor its products at the behest of the FBI, promising that the company that he founded, a waning firm called Microsoft, would happily compromise its security on demand for the US government. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14X1C)
In less than an hour, Wikileaks will publish a set of TOP-SECRET/COMINT-GAMMA documents -- "the most highly classified documents ever published by a media organization" -- that document NSA spying on UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, former French leader Nicolas Sarkozy, and key Japanese and EU trade reps in an attempt to gain an advantage in negotiations regarding climate change and global trade. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14WZM)
Netroots movements -- grassroots programmers who pitch in on political campaigns -- have been significant factors in US electoral campaigns since the Howard Dean era, and indeed, some of the key players from that era are still deeply involved in campaign tech, but the netroots that's pulling for the Sanders campaign is a significant advance on the netroots of years gone by. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14WZP)
https://vimeo.com/148156899Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles, an Iraqi/German artistic duo, covertly scanned a famous looted Egyptian treasure, the Bust of Queen Nefertiti, from its contested perch in Berlin's Neues Museum. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14WH7)
Kriszti Bozzai, a Hungarian maker who sells on Etsy as Copypastry, will turn your photos into a line-art caricature, extrude it into the third dimension, and 3D print it, so that you can bake cookies that look like you. It's about $50, including the custom art. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14WED)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#14TVW)
Rooney Mara has found her guilt regarding her lily-white turn as Tiger Lily in the derided and disastrous Peter Pan prequel "Pan," which set fire to about $200m all told.Even before Joe Wright’s live-action retelling of Peter Pan hit theaters, the production came under fire for casting Rooney Mara as the Native American Tiger Lily, and thousands signed a petition objecting to Mara’s casting. Now, less than a week before the Academy Awards and in the middle of the #OscarsSoWhite controversy, Mara has opened up about her own involvement in the whitewashing debate in a new interview with The Telegraph.“I really hate, hate, hate that I am on that side of the whitewashing conversation,†she told The Telegraph. “I really do. I don’t ever want to be on that side of it again. I can understand why people were upset and frustrated.â€Tell me, o internet, how Mara came to hate, hate, hate, hate being on the wrong side of the conversation, but only after the movie became a career-blighting bomb.
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by Cory Doctorow on (#14T6J)
Chelsea Manning's helpers write, "Citing potential copyright infringement, the Army censored materials on prison censorship from the Electronic Frontier Foundation that weresent to Chelsea by one of her volunteers." (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#14T35)
Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler legendarily had only one testicle. But he also had a "tiny deformed penis," according to researchers who claim to have uncovered the truth in medical records. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14SR2)
https://youtu.be/9IUhqhkmd3gLuna plays popular music on a Korean traditional instrument called the gayageum.
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14SPD)
"Watch 106-year-old Virginia McLaurin fulfill her dream of visiting the White House and meeting President Obama."
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14SNA)
Apple has published a letter explaining why it's not complying with the FBI's request to develop a unique version of iOS that would make it trivially easy for the FBI to unlock an iPhone. The FBI has a terrible record of abusing its power, and Apple doesn't want to enable them:[T]he order would set a legal precedent that would expand the powers of the government and we simply don’t know where that would lead us. Should the government be allowed to order us to create other capabilities for surveillance purposes, such as recording conversations or location tracking? This would set a very dangerous precedent....Law enforcement agents around the country have already said they have hundreds of iPhones they want Apple to unlock if the FBI wins this case. In the physical world, it would be the equivalent of a master key, capable of opening hundreds of millions of locks. Of course, Apple would do our best to protect that key, but in a world where all of our data is under constant threat, it would be relentlessly attacked by hackers and cybercriminals. As recent attacks on the IRS systems and countless other data breaches have shown, no one is immune to cyberattacks.Again, we strongly believe the only way to guarantee that such a powerful tool isn’t abused and doesn’t fall into the wrong hands is to never create it.Check out this post from James Comey, director of the FBI, which appeared on the Lawfare blog on Sunday:We simply want the chance, with a search warrant, to try to guess the terrorist's passcode without the phone essentially self-destructing and without it taking a decade to guess correctly. That's it. We don't want to break anyone's encryption or set a master key loose on the land. I hope thoughtful people will take the time to understand that.This is a joke. There are only a million possible combinations for a six-digit passcode. The FBI wants Apple to create a custom iOS that will allow the FBI to enter password guesses electronically, as fast as the iPhone can process them. The FBI would get the unlock code in less than 24 hours, and they know it. There is no "try."This article from The Intercept shows you how to set up your phone to use an 11-digit passcode, which would "take up to 253 years, and on average 127 years, to crack."From The Intercept:Here are a few final tips to make this long-passcode thing work better:Within the “Touch ID & Passcode†settings screen, make sure to turn on the Erase Data setting to erase all data on your iPhone after 10 failed passcode attempts.Make sure you don’t forget your passcode, or you’ll lose access to all of the data on your iPhone.Don’t use Touch ID to unlock your phone. Your attacker doesn’t need to guess your passcode if she can push your finger onto the home button to unlock it instead. (At least one court has ruled that while the police cannot compel you to disclose your passcode, they can compel you to use your fingerprint to unlock your smartphone.)Don’t use iCloud backups. Your attacker doesn’t need to guess your passcode if she can get a copy of all the same data from Apple’s server, where it’s no longer protected by your passcode.Do make local backups to your computer using iTunes, especially if you are worried about forgetting your iPhone passcode. You can encrypt the backups, too.By choosing a strong passcode, the FBI shouldn’t be able to unlock your encrypted phone, even if it installs a backdoored version of iOS on it. Not unless it has hundreds of years to spare.Image: iPhone Fiasco
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#14S9Y)
Huw Parkinson created this short film, entitled "Winter is Trumping."
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by Rob Beschizza on (#14RVG)
A man accused of killing at least 6 people in Kalamazoo was an Uber driver who picked up fares between shootings, reports CNN. The rampage continued for seven hours, according to their source, and Jason Brian Dalton was still looking for fares after he was done. One even joked with him: "you're not the shooter, are you?"For all intents and purposes, he was your average Joe. This was random," said Hadley.Getting appeared to struggle at times for the right words, if there were any, at Sunday's news conference."There is this sense of loss, anger (and) fear," he said. "On top of that, how do you tell the families of these victims that they were not targeted for any other reason than they were a target?"Reading stories about this guy, (taken alive, obviously) I'm struck by how obvious and shopworn the "lone white gunman" stock story is getting. Lots of mental health speculation, he-was-a-good-boy, what could possibly happened with this guy, "Average Joe", etc.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#14RK9)
Britain is to hold a referendum this summer on whether to leave the EU. Proponents of "Brexit" want to see less immigration and more self-determination; advocates of staying in the union anticipate horrors both economic and human if the country becomes, once again, an "island".Polls are running neck and neck. Britain is important enough that its departure could deal a mortal blow to the European Union; the Scots and Irish, in particular, are uneasily tied to England's destiny. Meanwhile, the pound is headed south, presumably in search for warmer climes.
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