Senin, 13 Desember 2010

WikiLeaks vulnerable to Espionage Act?

 

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December 13, 2010
  In this issue    
redarrow Study: 'Building IT' to speed energy efficiency
redarrow Life in the Chromeosphere
 
redarrow Gawker wrestles with reader data breach, hacking
redarrow How much did ads affect Twitter's 2010 trends?

If Julian Assange is indicted by the U.S. government for disseminating classified information, he'll have a difficult time fending off the vague but menacing Espionage Act.
A Sunday night outage that brought down Amazon Web sites in Europe was the result of hardware failure, not hacking attempts, according to the online retailer.
With companies from IT and building management systems moving into energy efficiency for buildings, Lux Research sees a shakeout coming.
Readers' passwords are compromised in data breach, then the site itself is hacked with links to its purported source code said to be posted at The Pirate Bay.
The hardware isn't ready and the OS is still beta, but Chrome OS notebooks look poised to steal the Netbook market from Microsoft.
A number of the entertainment entries on Twitter's top trends of 2010 were promoted via its paid ad system. This either taints Twitter's authenticity or proves its edgy business model.
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Ask.com has long been associated with questions and answers, but it's doubling down on the strategy. This time around, will the company get it right?
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Natali Morris talks to Twitter co-founder Biz Stone about Twitter's top trends of the year. Justin Bieber is the only living human on the list, trending behind the Gulf Oil Spill and FIFA World Cup.

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5. Life in the Chromeosphere
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