Auteur/autrice : noflux (Page 408 of 633)
The phone numbers and usernames of more than 4.6 million North American Snapchat users have been leaked online. SnapchatDB, an unofficial site run by an anonymous individual or group, allows open access to two files — one an SQL dump, one CSV text — that show details of the photo-sharing app’s users alongside their location.
La prime à la nouveauté. C’est la règle. Et finalement, si ce qu’on devait retenir de 2013, c’est que plus encore qu’en 2012, qu’en 2011, qu’en 2002, qu’en 1991, la hiérarchie de l’information est bêtement chronologique ?
« You could die tomorrow. I wouldn’t sacrifice my goldfish for you ». Oh ! (via ‘I would have been dead at nine’: Caterina Simonsen in hospital after backlash over defence of animal testing)
« Before directions provided by Google Maps, the interstate highway system, cars, the transcontinental railroad, and the Erie Canal, a traveler in New York City could expect to spend a whole day and night traveling over what a suburban commuter now does in an hour ». (via How Far You Could Get From New York in One Day, From 1800 to Today – David Yanofsky – The Atlantic Cities)
Les outils Feed through, Gourmet through et Jet plow permettent d’insérer des « implants » dans les serveurs de différents constructeurs, dont les américains Cisco et Dell ou le chinois Huawei. Ironie de l’histoire, ce constructeur avait été soupçonné de surveiller les internautes pour le compte des autorités chinoises.
Display Centric World (par Samsung Display)
Moto X Ad – WIRED Interactive Print Ad (par motorola)
« Last March we published a study that showed the majority of website traffic (51%) was generated by non-human entities, 60% of which were clearly malicious. As we soon learned, these facts came as a surprise to many Internet users, for whom they served as a rare glimpse of “in between the lines” of Google Analytics ». (via Report: Bot traffic is up to 61.5% of all website traffic)
If you aren’t careful, you could narrow your creativity. You won’t take risks,” said Ms. Loftis, the young adult novelist. “But the bigger risk is not giving the reader what she wants. I’ll take all the data I can get.



