Archive for 2014-02-02
NSA bulk collection ensnares under 30 percent of phone records daily - report
By : UnknownThe recently-unveiled US National Security Agency program that collects telephone records belonging to millions of Americans tracks only a small number of calls made each day, under 30-percent, officials with knowledge of the policy
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Indian Security Researcher Got Bounty For Facebook Logical Comment Bug
By : Unknown
Indian Security Researcher Manjesh S. Got Bounty For Found
Facebook Logical Comment Bug. Manjesh shared with us that how he found the Bug
in Logical Comment.
[#] Title: Logical
comment bug on facebook group.
[#] Worth: $500 USD
[#] Status: Fixed
[#] Severity: Low
[#] Author: Manjesh S
Maltrieve The Python Tool To Collect Malware Samples For Security Researchers
By : Unknown
Maltrieve is the open source Python tool to collect Malware
samples for security researchers. Maltrieve originated as a fork of mwcrawler.
Its Python based tool to retrieves malware directly from the sources as listed
at a number of sites, including:
- Malc0de
- Malware Black List
- Malware Domain List
- Malware Patrol
- Sacour.cn
- VX Vault
- URLqery
- CleanMX
Other improvements include:
- Proxy support
- Multithreading for improved performance
- Logging of source URLs
- Multiple user agent support
- Better error handling
- VxCage and Cuckoo Sandbox support
Understanding The Famous MySQL Injection Technique
By : Unknown
ABSTRACT
It is known that computers and software are developed and
designed by humans, human error is a reflection of a mental response to a
particular activity.
Did you know that numerous inventions and discoveries are
due to misconceptions?
Google buys 5.94 percent stake in Lenovo worth $750 million
By : Unknown
Google Inc bought a 5.94 percent stake in China’s Lenovo Group Ltd last month for $750 million, according to a disclosure on the Hong Kong stock exchange.
Google acquired 618.3 million Lenovo shares
Lenovo agreed to buy Google’s Motorola handset division last week for $2.91 billion in a cash and stock deal.
The deal ended Google’s short-lived foray into making consumer mobile devices and marks a pullback from its largest-ever acquisition. Google paid $12.5 billion for Motorola in 2012. Under this deal the search giant will keep the majority of Motorola’s mobile patents, considered its prize assets.
Lenovo will receive over 2,000 “patent assets” as part of the transaction, the companies said, but it remains unknown which will change hands and whether they might be subject to extra scrutiny from regulators. For Motorola, Lenovo will pay $660 million in cash, $750 million in Lenovo ordinary shares, and another $1.5 billion in the form of a three-year promissory note, Lenovo and Google said in a joint statement.
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