Monday, December 2, 2013

REPOST: Google promises to block web searches for child abuse images



Several months of discussion and pressure resulted to Google and Microsoft blocking Internet searches related to child abuse following the trials of two criminals. The Huffington Post has the report.
Internet searches for child abuse images will be blocked for the first time by Microsoft and Google after months of mounting pressure.

New software is to be introduced that will automatically block 100,000 "unambiguous" search terms which lead to illegal content, Google chief executive Eric Schmidt told the Daily Mail.

Prime Minister David Cameron hailed the decision by the two internet giants as "significant progress" after the companies had insisted that it "couldn't be done, shouldn't be done".

The restrictions will be launched in the UK first, before being expanded to other English-speaking countries and 158 other languages in the next six months.

A further 13,000 search terms linked with child sex abuse will flash up with warnings from Google and charities warning the user that the content could be illegal and pointing them towards help.

Mr Cameron told the newspaper that child protection experts drew up the list of unique search terms which would undoubtedly lead to sex abuse images and videos.

"If you used these you were looking for child abuse images online," he said.

"At the time, Google and Microsoft - who cover 95% of the market - said blocking search results couldn't be done, that it shouldn't be done.

"They argued that it was against the very principle of the internet and search engines to block material, even if there was no doubt that some of the search terms being used by paedophiles were abhorrent in a modern society.

"I did not accept that then and I do not accept that now."

Image Source: www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
Calls for the internet companies to take action against searching for illegal content reached boiling point following the trials of child killers Mark Bridger and Stuart Hazel earlier this year.

Bridger, who murdered five-year-old April Jones, and Hazel, who killed 12-year-old Tia Sharp, both used the internet to search for child abuse images before the killings.

Mr Cameron told the newspaper: "We learnt from cases like the murder of Tia Sharp and April Jones that people will often start accessing extreme material via a simple search in one of the mainstream engines."

Mr Schmidt said Google has been working with Microsoft, which owns the Bing search engine, and law enforcement agencies since the summer following strong warnings from the Government to take action.

"We've listened, and in the last three months put more than 200 people to work developing new, state-of-the-art technology to tackle the problem," he said.

"We've fine tuned Google Search to prevent links to child sexual abuse material from appearing in our results.

"While no algorithm (instructions for software) is perfect - and Google cannot prevent paedophiles adding new images to the web - these changes have cleared up the results for over 100,000 queries that might be related to the sexual abuse of kids."
Minneapolis, MN-based Search Results LLC has created a simplified space for users to access major search engine results. Visit this website to start your Web search.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

REPOST: The astounding rise of ‘search engines’ and ‘social media,’ in 3 charts



Search engines and social networking have been so ubiquitous in the first decades of the new millennium that it is hard to believe that they weren't present a little over 20 years ago. These three charts, explained by Brian Fung of the Washington Post highlight the rise of the search engine, which took place around the same time as the emergence of social networking sites.

Google Ngram, the tool that lets you chart the relative frequency of words as they appear in English and foreign literature over time, has now added support for wildcard searches. This means you can plug in a search for "bar *" and conceivably get results not just for "bar stool" but also phrases like "bar exam" and "bar none."

In a moment of meta-ness this weekend, I searched for "search *_NOUN" — which will return only phrases with the word "search" followed by a noun.

Image source: washingtonpost.com

Whether Google's rise has something to do with the more recent decline in the term "search engine" is anyone's guess. It's been seven years, after all, since Google was added as a verb to Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionary — and arguably even longer since people began using the company's name as a stand-in for "search" in common parlance.

The dip might also be partly explained by the industry's move away from search-engine optimization. As the Web got more complex, Google adjusted its algorithms so publishers couldn't simply load a page with keywords to boost its profile. A decline in the pace of new books mentioning SEO could have a small but measurable impact. In fact — bearing in mind that this is an unscientific study — that may be approximately what we see here; while SEO continues to appear in books, the rate of growth seems to have slowed beginning in 2005.

Another possible explanation could be our collective shift toward social media, which has become an increasing focus in literature since the 2000s.

Image source: washingtonpost.com

Although "social media" appears in just a tiny fraction of English books — it doesn't even show up when you search Ngram for "social *_NOUN" — its rate of growth in literature has been even faster than it was for "search engines." That said, the track record for social media is a lot shorter; it'd be unwise to presume anything about its trajectory from just a decade of prominence.

It's also worth noting that 2008 is the most recent year for which Ngram provides data; we don't really know what's happened to "search engines," "social media," "google" or other terms in the years since. Still, what we are able to see paints a fascinating picture of where we've already been.

Search engines have, since the late 2000s, dominated the Internet, with independent players like My Search Results flourishing among its giant mainstream counterparts.  Visit this website for more on online searches.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

REPOST: Mugged by a Mug Shot Online



This article for The New York Times focuses on the recent changes in Google algorithm that aim to shut down shady mugshot websites.

Image Source: nytimes.com
IN March last year, a college freshman named Maxwell Birnbaum was riding in a van filled with friends from Austin, Tex., to a spring-break rental house in Gulf Shores, Ala. As they neared their destination, the police pulled the van over, citing a faulty taillight. When an officer asked if he could search the vehicle, the driver — a fraternity brother of Mr. Birnbaum’s who quickly regretted his decision — said yes.
Six Ecstasy pills were found in Mr. Birnbaum’s knapsack, and he was handcuffed and placed under arrest. Mr. Birnbaum later agreed to enter a multiyear, pretrial diversion program that has involved counseling and drug tests, as well as visits to Alabama every six months to update a judge on his progress.
But once he is done, Mr. Birnbaum’s record will be clean. Which means that by the time he graduates from the University of Texas at Austin, he can start his working life without taint.
At least in the eyes of the law. In the eyes of anyone who searches for Mr. Birnbaum online, the taint could last a very long time. That’s because the mug shot from his arrest is posted on a handful of for-profit Web sites, with names like Mugshots, BustedMugshots and JustMugshots. These companies routinely show up high in Google searches; a week ago, the top four results for “Maxwell Birnbaum” were mug-shot sites.
The ostensible point of these sites is to give the public a quick way to glean the unsavory history of a neighbor, a potential date or anyone else. That sounds civic-minded, until you consider one way most of these sites make money: by charging a fee to remove the image. That fee can be anywhere from $30 to $400, or even higher. Pay up, in other words, and the picture is deleted, at least from the site that was paid.
To Mr. Birnbaum, and millions of other Americans now captured on one or more of these sites, this sounds like extortion. Mug shots are merely artifacts of an arrest, not proof of a conviction, and many people whose images are now on display were never found guilty, or the charges against them were dropped. But these pictures can cause serious reputational damage, as Mr. Birnbaum learned in his sophomore year, when he applied to be an intern for a state representative in Austin. Mr. Birnbaum heard about the job through a friend.
“The assistant to this state rep called my friend back and said, ‘We’d like to hire him, but we Google every potential employee, and the first thing that came up when we searched for Maxwell was a mug shot for a drug arrest,’ ” Mr. Birnbaum said. “I know what I did was wrong, and I understand the punishment,” he continued. “But these Web sites are punishing me, and because I don’t have the money it would take to get my photo off them all, there is nothing I can do about it.”
It was only a matter of time before the Internet started to monetize humiliation. In this case, the time was early 2011, when mug-shot Web sites started popping up to turn the most embarrassing photograph of anyone’s life into cash. The sites are perfectly legal, and they get financial oxygen the same way as other online businesses — through credit card companies and PayPal. Some states, though, are looking for ways to curb them. The governor of Oregon signed a bill this summer that gives such sites 30 days to take down the image, free of charge, of anyone who can prove that he or she was exonerated or whose record has been expunged. Georgia passed a similar law in May. Utah prohibits county sheriffs from giving out booking photographs to a site that will charge to delete them.
But as legislators draft laws, they are finding plenty of resistance, much of it from journalists who assert that public records should be just that: public. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press argues that any restriction on booking photographs raises First Amendment issues and impinges on editors’ right to determine what is newsworthy. That right was recently exercised by newspapers and Web sites around the world when the public got its first look at Aaron Alexis, the Navy Yard gunman, through a booking photograph from a 2010 arrest.

Image Source: nytimes.com

“What we have is a situation where people are doing controversial things with public records,” says Mark Caramanica, a director at the committee, a nonprofit organization based in Arlington, Va. “But should we shut down the entire database because there are presumably bad actors out there?”
MUG shots have been online for years, but they appear to have become the basis for businesses in 2010, thanks to Craig Robert Wiggen, who served three years in federal prison for a scheme to lift credit card numbers from diners at a Tex-Mex restaurant in Tallahassee, Fla. He was looking for another line of work, according to news articles, and started Florida.arrests.org.
The idea soon spread, and today there are more than 80 mug-shot sites. They Hoover up most of their images from sheriffs’ Web sites, where rules and policies about whose mug shot is posted and for how long can vary, from state to state and from county to county.
The sites are designed for easy ogling. Some feature a running scroll of the famous (Lindsay Lohan), the infamous (James E. Holmes, accused in the Aurora, Colo., mass shooting) and the obscure but colorful (a man with an American flag painted on his face and bald head).
The owners of these sites can be hard to find, or at least to reach on the phone. An exception is Arthur D’Antonio III, 25, founder of JustMugshots, which is based in Nevada (though he declined to be more specific). Mr. D’Antonio was eager to combat any suggestion that there was something illicit or unethical about the mug-shot posting business in general and his Web site in particular.
“No one should have to go to the courthouse to find out if their kid’s baseball coach has been arrested, or if the person they’re going on a date with tonight has been arrested,” he said. “Our goal is to make that information available online, without having to jump through any hoops.”
A few years ago, one of Mr. D’Antonio’s friends turned up on a mug-shot Web site, and Mr. D’Antonio, who has been earning good money writing software code since he was 12, spotted a business opportunity. JustMugshots began in 2012 and now has five employees, two of whom spend all their time dredging up images from 300 sources. The site has nearly 16.8 million such photos, according to Mr. D’Antonio. He would not discuss revenue or profit, except to say, “We’re seeing some growth.”
JustMugshots has a “courtesy removal service,” allowing people who have been exonerated, or never charged, or even those who can demonstrate that they have turned around their lives, to get their image taken down free. Mr. D’Antonio declined to say how many people had been granted mercy deletions.
The opposite case — a person who is guilty of a terrible crime and has the money to remove his or her face from the Web site — presents another sort of quandary. If the point of JustMugshots is to inform the public, why should the rich and convicted get a pass?
“That’s where it gets tricky,” Mr. D’Antonio said. “We review paid orders and we have refunded paid orders, if, after doing some research, it becomes clear that there is a reason to do so.”
He would not say how many times JustMugshots has returned money of a customer deemed too awful to delete. Nor did he seem uncomfortable being the arbiter of who is shadowed by a mug shot and who is not. He also passed on the opportunity to be photographed for this article. Better to keep a low profile, he said.
Having his face online could create problems.
JUSTMUGSHOTS is one of several sites named in a class-action lawsuit filed last year by Scott A. Ciolek, a lawyer in Toledo, Ohio. Mr. Ciolek argues that the sites violate Ohio’s right-of-publicity statute, which gives state residents some control over the commercial use of their name and likeness. He also says the sites violate the state’s extortion law.
“You can’t threaten to embarrass someone unless they pay you money,” he said, “even if they did exactly what you are threatening to embarrass them about.”
Lance C. Winchester, a lawyer in Austin who represents BustedMugshots and MugshotsOnline, both named in the lawsuit, says Mr. Ciolek’s lawsuit is a stinker because the United States Supreme Court has ruled time and again that mug shots are public records.
“I understand people think there is a dilemma presented by a Web site where you can pay to have a mug shot removed,” he said. “I understand that people don’t like to have their mug shots posted online. But it can’t be extortion as a matter of law because republishing something that has already been published is not extortion.”
Like JustMugshots, the Web sites operated by Mr. Winchester’s clients also say they will take down an image, at no charge, for qualified supplicants. But many who qualify for this pass to get off the site free don’t use it, largely because they don’t believe that the offer is real. One of them is Dr. Janese Trimaldi, 40, a physician who recently completed her residency in Tampa, Fla.
On a terrifying evening in July 2011, she says, she locked herself in her bedroom to hide from a drunken, belligerent boyfriend. He went into the kitchen, retrieved a steak knife and jimmied open the door.
“He was more than 6 feet tall, and weighed 250 pounds,” she said by phone in Tampa. “I’m 5 feet and at the time I weighed about 100 pounds. So when he got in, he lifted me by my arms, the way you lift a child, and threw me six feet backward.”
The screams and commotion caused a neighbor to call the police. The boyfriend — whom Dr. Trimaldi did not want named for fear that he would stalk her — contended that a bleeding scratch on his chest had been inflicted by Dr. Trimaldi with the knife. (It was from one of her fingernails, she says.) She was arrested and charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and battery domestic violence.
The state dropped the charges, according to a document signed by Mark A. Ober, the state attorney in Hillsborough County, Fla. A few months later, her booking photograph turned up on a Florida mug-shot Web site and with it another mug shot from a 1996 arrest on an accusation of possession of marijuana and steroids. The authorities had raided her apartment on suspicion that a different boyfriend — this one a bodybuilder — was illegally selling the steroids. Records show that she was quickly released, and a certificate of disposition from the 13th Judicial Circuit of Florida shows that she was not prosecuted for either charge.
She paid $30 to have the images taken down, but they soon appeared on other sites, one of which wanted $400 to pull the picture.
“I’ve read accounts of people paying and not having the photos removed,” she said. “Or they pay and appear on other sites. The whole thing is a racket.”
Now studying for her medical boards and $200,000 in student loan debt, she is gearing up for a job search and worries that two photographs could wreck years of hard work to practice medicine.
“If I wasn’t a level-headed, positive person,” she wrote in an e-mail to Mr. Ciolek, the lawyer in Toledo, “I would have seriously considered ending my own life.”
LEGISLATORS have heard dozens of stories like Dr. Trimaldi’s and scrambled for remedies. Jennifer Williamson, an Oregon state representative from Portland, helped to draft her state’s bill, and she is the first to acknowledge that it is far from ideal.
“All approaches have significant shortcomings,” she said, referring to laws in other states. “I don’t know what the perfect tool is, but I’m sure we’ll be back at the drawing board soon.”
The trick is balancing the desire to guard individual reputations with the news media’s right to publish. Journalists put booking photographs in the same category as records of house sales, school safety records and restaurant health inspections — public information that they would like complete latitude to publish, even if the motives of some publishers appear loathsome.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press favors unfettered access to the images, no matter how obscure the arrestee and no matter the ultimate disposition of the case. Even laws that force sites to delete images of the exonerated, the committee maintains, are a step in the wrong direction.
“It’s an effort to deny history,” says Mr. Caramanica, the committee director. “I think it’s better if journalists and the public, not the government, are the arbiters of what the public gets to see.”
People eager to vanish from mug-shot sites can try a mug-shot removal service, a mini-industry that has sprung up in the last two years and is nearly as opaque as the one it is intended to counter. “I’m not going to go into what we do,” said Tyronne Jacques, founder of RemoveSlander.com (Motto: “Bailout of the Internet for good!”). “Whatever works.”
Removal services aren’t cheap — RemoveMyMug.com charges $899 for its “multiple mug shot package” — and owners of large reputation-management companies, which work with people trying to burnish their online image, contend that they are a waste of money.
“Their business model is to find someone willing to pay to take down their image, which marks them as a target who is willing to pay more,” says Mike Zammuto, president of the reputation company Brand.com.
Princess Matthews, a mother of four who lives in Toledo, tried the budget approach to remove mug shots from a handful of sites. During a tumultuous period in her life, she was arrested on charges ofassault, drug possession and theft, among other crimes. All but one of the charges — for attempted petty theft — were expunged or classified as criminal mischief, she says.Now out of an abusive relationship, she is starting a nonprofit group called Project No More Pain, to combat domestic violence.
Yet her mug shots linger. A few months ago, she made a deal with a local lawyer: he would try to have her mug shots deleted, and she would pay him $100 and clean two apartments that he wanted to rent. She was assisted during that afternoon of scrubbing by her daughter, who attends a middle school where online mug-shot browsing had caught on. Her daughter was taunted when her mother’s image surfaced.
“Her grades dropped; she was miserable,” Ms. Matthews recalled. “She was getting into fights. When I tried talking to her about it, she wasn’t communicating.”
But the deal with the lawyer didn’t work.
“He was able to get a few of the photos removed from one site, related to charges that were expunged,” she said, “but they wanted $300 apiece to remove the other shots. And that was just one site. I don’t have that kind of money.”

Image Source: nytimes.com

AS painful as they are for arrestees, mug shots seem to attract big online crowds. Google’s results are supposed to reflect both relevance and popularity, and mug-shot sites appear to rank exceptionally well without resorting to trickery, according to Doug Pierce, founder of Cogney, a search engine optimization company based in Hong Kong. At the request of The New York Times, Mr. Pierce studied a number of the largest mug-shot sites and found that they were beloved by Google’s algorithm in part because viewers who open them tend to stick around.
“When others search your name, that link to Mugshots.com is way more attention-grabbing than your LinkedIn profile,” Mr. Pierce said. “Once they click, they stare in disbelief, and look around a bit, which means they stay on the page, rather than returning immediately to the search results. Google takes that as a sign that the site is relevant, and that boosts it even more.”
What’s curious is that Google doesn’t penalize these sites for obtaining their images and text from other places, a sin in the company’s guidelines. The idea is that Web sites should be rewarded for coming up with original material and receive demerits for copying.
If it acted, Google could do what no legislator could — demote mug-shot sites and thus reduce, if not eliminate, their power to stigmatize.
Initially, a Google spokesman named Jason Freidenfelds fielded questions on this topic with a statement that amounted to an empathetic shrug. He wrote that the company felt for those affected by mug-shot sites but added that “with very narrow exceptions, we take down as little as possible from search.”
Two days later, he wrote with an update: “Our team has been working for the past few months on an improvement to our algorithms to address this overall issue in a consistent way. We hope to have it out in the coming weeks.”
Mr. Freidenfelds said that when he sent the first statement, he was unaware of this effort. He added that the sites do, in fact, run afoul of a Google guideline, though he declined to say which one. Nor would he detail the algorithmic changes the company was considering — because doing so, he explained, could spur mug-shot sites to start devising countermeasures.
As it happens, Google’s team worked faster than Mr. Freidenfelds expected, introducing that algorithm change sometime on Thursday. The effects were immediate: on Friday, two mug shots of Janese Trimaldi, which had appeared prominently in an image search, were no longer on the first page. For owners of these sites, this is very bad news.
And, it turns out, these owners face another looming problem: getting paid.
Asked two weeks ago about its policies on mug-shot sites, officials at MasterCard spent a few days examining the issue, and came back with an answer.
“We looked at the activity and found it repugnant,” said Noah Hanft, general counsel with the company. MasterCard executives contacted the merchant bank that handles all of its largest mug-shot site accounts and urged it to drop them as customers. “They are in the process of terminating them,” Mr. Hanft said.
PayPal came back with a similar response after being contacted for this article.
“When mug-shot removal services were brought to our attention and we made a careful review,” said John Pluhowski, a spokesman for PayPal, “we decided to discontinue support for mug-shot removal payments.”
American Express and Discover were contacted on Monday and, two days later, both companies said they were severing relationships with mug-shot sites. A representative of Visa wrote to say it was asking merchant banks to investigate business practices of the sites “to ensure they are both legal and in compliance with Visa operating regulations.”
On Friday, Mr. D’Antonio of JustMugshots was coping with a drop in Web traffic and, at the same time, determining which financial services companies would do business with him. “We’re still trying to wrap our heads around this,” he said.

MySearchResults is a safe and secure alternative to Google.  Experience its sleek user interface at mysearchresults.com.


REPOST: Why Users Delete Your Mobile App



With lowering costs of mobile devices and mobile data services, mobile app developers are racing to capitalize and build the next download craze.  For developers who can't seem to get the formula right, an article on Search Engine Watch suggests a few reasons why customers might be losing interest.
Mobile app stores are growing by the minute. There are over 45,000 apps added to app stores every month.
It isn't enough to just develop and launch your mobile app. Getting users aware of your mobile app can be competitive and expensive.
In 2012, the average user downloaded 80 apps per device. This is eight times more than when there were only 10 apps downloaded for every one device in 2008.
With those numbers it's quite a feat to get your app downloaded, but what can be even harder is getting users to use your app more than once. Marketers and developers need to plan and execute marketing efforts to keep users engaged after your app is downloaded to their device.

Why Users Delete Mobile Apps

Because the data doesn't lie, most of your users either aren't using your app or uninstalling it altogether. Research by Mobilewalla revealed that users eventually delete 90 percent of all downloaded apps. Make one wrong move that angers or frustrates users – and chances are your app will be deleted.
Mobile App Types of Problems Encountered
Image source: Search Engine Watch
The survey by Compuware also sheds light on the most common reasons why users might delete mobile apps or give them bad reviews. The number one cause: freezes. Sixty-two percent of the people who were surveyed said they would delete an app if it froze up.
Another survey from uSamp revealed that 71 percent of users said they would delete an app that crashed, 59 percent for slow responsiveness, 55 percent for heavy battery usage, and 53 percent for too many ads. That's a lot of pressure for developers and marketers!
This tells us a couple of things:
  1. Mobile customers are intolerant and fickle. (You know you are). If your app isn't a knockout on first impression, it's probably going to be deleted or will be forgotten on their smartphones.
  2. You're potentially losing thousands or millions of dollars in revenue. That's no joke.
Profit in the app world is a numbers game dictated largely by your app users. Whether your app business model is pay to play, in-app purchases, advertising, or freemium; theoretically, the amount you can generate from an app is highly dependent on the number of users you have.
In a study by Gartner, this year, in-app purchases will account for 17 percent of revenues to more than $4 billion. Advertising will account for 7 percent of revenues, which relies heavily on mobile app usage data.
Mobile App Store Revenue
Image source: Search Engine Watch

Why Users Abandon Your App

Here are top reasons why users abandon your app:
  • Complex or bad registration process: Users won't keep an app if the registration process is complicated. Mobile users want to start using their new apps quickly. If logging in isn't a fluid experience, you may have users leave your app for good. Greet new users with useful welcome messages or an intuitive tour.
  • It's another "me too" app: It's difficult to stand out in a crowd of a million. (Literally a million apps just in the iOS app store). Search "to-do list" on any app store and you'll find pages of apps that offer "the best" solution to managing your to-do list. Finding the best combination of channel, creative, and timing for your marketing campaigns to reach your target audience – and stand out from competitors – is critical to make sure your app gets repeat use.
  • Lots of bugs and errors: Mobile users have a very low tolerance for unstable apps and nothing can turn them away faster than crashes and buggy interfaces. That's why 71 percent of users will delete an app after it crashes. If your app happens to have bugs when it's released, be sure you have the resources to handle support questions or you may receive a lot of poor reviews in app stores.
It's important to remember that the factors above aren't the only reasons customers will delete an app after one use. Every app is different. The problems in your app's first time user experience might not always be apparent from just looking at these three issues.

Don't Leave Money on the Table

To figure out how to prevent users from deleting your app, you need to understand why they're leaving in the first place. If your users are abandoning your app after only one use, whatever is turning them away is probably not very deep into your app experience.
The launch and registration of your mobile app is the first opportunity to impress new users of your app. By seeing how your first time users navigate through your app and where and when they leave, you'll be able to identify the exact feature and/or screen that caused them to drop off – and fix it.
Monitor valuable metrics, such as tutorial completion, time spent on each screen, quitting the app, back tracking between screens and more. For example, if users are closing out of your app after connecting their Facebook account to create a new account, it may mean there's a bug that's causing your app to crash or it could be that users are reluctant to share their social network information on their first visit. You may need to offer email registration as an additional option.
The mobile app landscape is only going to get bigger and more competitive. As more apps enter the market, you're going to need every advantage you can get to stay ahead of your competitors.
Being the top app starts with being discovered.  Understand how search engines and search results work by reading about My Search Results on this website.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

REPOST: Mercenary Hackers Will Turn The Internet Into Afghanistan-Like 'Warzone'



Mercenary hackers? Zero day exploits? This article from Business Insider discusses how they can possibly transform the entire Web into a battlefield.


Image Source: businessinsider.com



Mercenary hackers and the increasingly high fees governments and corporations pay them for "zero day" exploits will eventually turn the entire internet into a battlefield. A "zero day" exploit is a cyber vulnerability that no one has seen yet in "the wild," meaning on the web, in either forums or in action against targets.

Lately, these zero days are going for more and more money.

Business Insider recently talked to Professor Peter Ludlow, an Internet culture expert and professor of philosophy at Northwestern University, about the implications of weaponizing the internet.

"Hackers used to find exploits for a free T-Shirt from a company," said Ludlow.

Now companies are paying out hundreds of thousands if not millions of dollars, depending on the exploit, to individual hackers as well as the growing legion of private cyber-mercenary companies. Even the government has gotten into the mix, hiring out private contractors and building vast armies of "cyber warriors."

Internet dissident and cyber-minded journalist Barret Brown referred to it as the "cyber industrial complex."

"The whole internet has become Beirut, or Afghanistan, the whole thing is a war zone, basically being fueled by nation states giving money to people who develop these kinds of exploits," said Ludlow.

Ludlow said that throwing money at the problem isn't going to solve it. "The Internet is a dynamic system," said Ludlow, "any attempt to tame the Internet will likely fail."

Referring to these exploits, Ludlow asserts that there is "no bottom" to the hole when it comes to security gaps. There will always be breaches, and if the government and corporations pay, the breaches will just get increasingly more complex and more nasty. "If they keep paying for these exploits ... you are going to have very rich virus hunters out there, with incredible resources to continue this," said Ludlow.

These rich companies intend to see how deep the rabbit hole goes, Ludlow concluded, and the Internet will be dragged along with them.


Responsible use of the Internet is advisable, even when using the revolutionary Web search aggregator Search Results, LLC. Connect with this Facebook page to know the latest buzz on the Internet.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Digital codes: The future of manufacturing




Image source: proactiveinvestors.co.uk

Manufacturing processes involve heavy machinery, factory-based facilities, and other capital goods. With many businesses going digital, the mass production of goods may soon follow the same trend. Analysts believe that future manufacturing practices will already be based on digital codes, much like the same way music is bought in online portals today.

Three-dimensional printing will expand its range in the future, conquering areas such as planning, prototyping, engineering, and tooling. It is seeing growth in highly specialized categories and functions such as medical implants built on the digital blueprint of an X-ray or CAT scan. As described by this Bloomberg Businessweek article, “3D printing will do much more than expand the universe of custom-made products; it will transform and change our understanding of what a manufacturer is.”


Image source: gizmag.com

Past and modern manufacturing skyrocketed in terms of gross revenue due to effective logistics, high-quality output, and efficient labor-capital mix. However, improvement does not stop with these methods. Higher percentages of service-based industries on which their GDPs are anchored are defining characteristics of developed economies. The ability to divert human capital from manufacturing and into the service sector is an effect of intelligently engineered, automated, and highly technologized manufacturing systems.

Future manufacturing practices are expected to minimize the participation of manual labor, even in developing countries. Workers will be reduced to tasks of inputting digital codes and feeding raw material into a 3D printer, laser cutter, CNC machine, or an automated paper cutter.

3D-printed products are designed with a complex digital infrastructure but are nevertheless suited for fast-adoption innovations. They enable companies to introduce products to the market that customers will prejudge as essential goods. It may well be the case of invention mothering necessity this time.

Shapeways, Thingverse, and Quirky are some of the service providers that utilize 3D printing technology to deliver innovation, design prototyping, manufacturing, marketing, and selling.


Image source: telegraph.co.uk

News on digital media and technology can be searched on metasearch engines like Metacrawler and MySearchResults. For other updates on the sector, visit this Facebook page.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Why Google is not the only fish, it's just a lone species



Image Search: brighthub.com
 



















Search engine folklore reveals that Google must be the best way to crawl the Internet for specialized information. But if people think in terms of how majority of search engine users learned their search practices, Google’s predominance in user habits could be challenged by further exploration of the search world. There are viable alternatives to Google that were overshadowed by the cannon, and these are emerging now as geeky, sometimes circuitous, but no less effective means to go around.



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There’s a certain resemblance between search engines embedded in social media and metasearch engines. The analogy may be far off, but these two search categories intersect at a crucial point. While Google has ways of dictating keyterms and prioritizing results for its large user base, metasearch engines and social media search do not discard user queries in defining results. They operate on the level of pedestrian queries, not paid specialized jargon that defines the Web content of businesses and other official institutions.


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In minor search engine roles are metasearch engine sites like Metacrawler, Mamma, and mysearchresults.com. These aggregate search engine queries from major search engines like Google and allow users to refine their search terms on their own. The user filter distills search results from paid ones, such that metasearch engines are actually known for leveling the search market somewhat. Except that in revenue comparisons between them and Google, they may earn peanuts, or nothing at all.


There’s a good number of metasearch engines taken for granted by search users. Those mentioned above figure among the popular ones, while less-known sites include Seekz, iBoogie.com, and Zuula. For more about metasearch engines and the search industry, visit this Facebook page.