Spiga

New way to hack - Thumb drive

Hackers always are on the lookout for the most vulnerable spot on your personal computers. These days, that weakest link might be your flash thumb drive.

Thumb drives — which can fit gigabytes of documents, music and video on a stick about the size of a pack of gum — are a convenient way to shuffle files among different computers. They plug into your computer’s universal serial bus port and appear as a hard drive on your PC.

Their growing popularity, huge storage capacity and ability to load a computer’s essential system files makes them an inviting target for hackers, too.

ThreatSense.Net, the malware monitoring site run by antivirus software maker Eset, found that 10.3% of recent malware detections involved programs trying to take advantage of thumb drives and other removable media.

ALERTPAY: The Future of Payment Processor

AlertPay is the one getting at top of the industry, and this out of many reasons:

1) Alertpay has shown great reliability for years

2) Support is excellent, the fees reasonable

3) Security is ideal,

4) Worldwide available and fundable through creditcard, bankaccount, etc., money is send per email.

Alertpay is the payment processor also for websites working with multilevelmarketing and risky businesses. nobody has to be afraid, that his account gets blocked or restricted

They also have a referral system you find nowhere else:

You get 5 dollars for every active referral you bring, and even 10 dollar per referal, if you bring more than 10. thats just fantastic, but thats its not getting too fantastic, alertpay make two restrictions, and these restrictions are also the only disadvantages i can see about alertpay:first, to get your referral money, your referred user has to open a secured or premium account. I

In contrary to e-gold, who only know one sort of account, alertpay has three different types of account, and this sucks. The first one is the personal account (1 $ fee per transaction), the second one is for business (2.5 % and 0.25 % per transaction) and the third one is the secured account (for risky business, like mlm, 3.90% and 0.59 $ per transaction).

NINTENDO WII

The Wii (pronounced as the English pronoun we, IPA: /wiː/) is the fifth home video game console released by Nintendo. The console is the direct successor to the Nintendo GameCube. Nintendo states that its console targets a broader demographic than that of Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3. It competes with both as part of the seventh generation of video game systems.


A distinguishing feature of the console is its wireless controller, the Wii Remote, which can be used as a handheld pointing device and detect movement in three dimensions. Another is WiiConnect24, which enables it to receive messages and updates over the Internet while in standby mode.

IPHONE 3G

Right after the WWDC 2008 where Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed the new 3G iPhone 2.0, Globe Telecom released news that it will be offering the new iPhone to the Philippines.

Apple is selling the iPhone 3G at $199 for the 8GB model and $299 for the 16GB model. The units will also come in black and white colors (plastic backplating). Of course, the price includes a 2-year contract with Globe.



WEB 3.0

Web 3.0, the "official" definition.

Some folks have been asking me for the clear definition of the term Web 3.0.

Web 3.0 is defined as the creation of high-quality content and services produced by gifted individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform.

Web 2.0 services like digg and YouTube evolve into Web 3.0 services with an additional layer of individual excellence and focus. As an example, funnyordie.com leverages all the standard YouTube Web 2.0 feature sets like syndication and social networking, while adding a layer of talent and trust to them.

A version of digg where experts check the validity of claims, corrected errors, and restated headlines to be more accurate would be the Web 3.0 version. However, I'm not sure if the digg community will embrace that any time soon.

Wikipedia, considered a Web 1.5 service, is experiencing the start of the Web 3.0 movement by locking pages down as they reach completion, and (at least in their German version) requiring edits to flow through trusted experts.