5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Saturday, 8 November 2014

Asus To Begin Selling Android Wear-Powered ZenWatch In The U.S. Nov. 9

Asus To Begin Selling Android Wear-Powered ZenWatch In The U.S. Nov. 9

Darrell Etherington
TechCrunch

The Android Wear smartwatch collection is expanding, with a host of new devices hitting pre-holiday season after their initial debut this summer. The Asus ZenWatch will be the next to go on sale, with a street date of November 9 for Best Buy initially, with a later launch date on Google Play in the U.S., at a price of $199. We first got wind of the Asus Android Wear device at Google’s I/O in June, via an exclusive report right here on TechCrunch, but customers will start getting their actual hands on hardware soon.

The Asus project is interesting for a couple of reasons: First, it manages to offer a unique design compared to other rectangular Android Wear watches, and one that might closest resemble the Apple Watch coming next year from everyone’s favorite fruit company, at least on a surface level. Second, it’s the first Android Wear watch to include UI features and more customized software. Google has said that it kept the initial release of Android Wear devices pretty basic and essentially all locked on providing the same experience, but also that manufacturers wouldn’t always be so handcuffed, so it’ll be interesting to see what Asus does with the first taste of a bit more freedom.




While all the Android Wear devices to date have managed to perform admirably in terms of nailing the basics, I’ve yet to test one that struck me as anything other than a passing fancy. The Moto 360 probably comes closest, but the fact that its circular display isn’t a perfect circle is almost heartbreaking from a design standpoint, and despite marketing bluster, Android Wear seems better suited to square or rectangular displays. Asus is offering a look that should be a good mix of fashion and function, with a battery-friendly AMOLED display and easily customizable strap options. There’s no built-in GPS, however, which means it can’t take advantage of the latest software offerings in the Android Wear platform firmware.

At $199, the Asus ZenWatch is on par with most current devices, but its unique customization of Android Wear might start to show us how OEMs can differentiate Android wearables outside of hardware design considerations.

Federal AIDS website insecurely transmitted user locations for years

Federal AIDS website insecurely transmitted user locations for years

Dante D'Orazio
The Verge 


Everyone loves to hate Healthcare.gov, but there are plenty of other bad websites out there. Take, for example, AIDS.gov. The Washington Post reports that the site has failed to adhere to basic web security protocols for the past few years. As a result, anyone snooping on internet traffic could easily find the location and identity of someone searching for locations that offer HIV testing facilities or other services.
The culprit is encryption — or rather, the lack thereof. Like the vast majority of websites, AIDS.gov and another similar government site offering HIV assistance, has not used SSL encryption to maintain its users' privacy. SSL, also known as Secure Sockets Layer, is often used on banking websites to scramble data sent between people and websites. It's typically denotes by a green padlock in the address-bar.

A disappointingly low security standard for a sensitive matter
Without SSL, third parties could have easily snoop on the web activity of those using the Department of Health and Human Services-run site. That included the precise longitude and latitude of those using the app or website to find nearby clinics or aid centers. Those who used such services on the website while on public WI-Fi hotspots would be at particular risk.
Considering the history of HIV and AIDS, it comes to the surprise of many that the HHS made little effort to keep the privacy of its users secure. But it serves as a worthwhile reminder that not nearly enough sites use SSL or other encryption technologies. According to The Washington Post, AIDS.gov is thankfully no longer on that list — encryption is now mandatory.

Harvard secretly installed cameras in lecture halls to monitor student attendance

Harvard secretly installed cameras in lecture halls to monitor student attendance

Dante D'Orazio
The Verge 

Even students at the world's finest universities can struggle to make it to class. At Harvard, university officials initiated a controversial research program that saw cameras secretly installed in lecture halls just to keep tabs on student attendance. The program — which was kept secret from professors and students alike — was revealed this week at a faculty meeting, reports The Boston Globe.
The research project, which was carried out this past spring, used cameras placed in lecture halls to take a photo every minute. According to remarks from university vice provost Peter Bol, computer software then analyzed the pictures to see how many students attended lectures. The photographs were then destroyed.

But university officials didn't inform professors or their students that they were being monitored. Bol says that was to make sure that the data gathered was accurate, and he added that the research wasn't designed to track particular students or analyze professors. Instead, professors were provided the data after the research was completed.

The incident raises concerns over how and when a community can be studied for research without their knowledge. A balance must be struck between maintaining useful data without compromising privacy. Many believe Facebook similarly crossed that line when it altered hundreds of thousands of users' News Feeds for a psychology experiment that was revealed this summer. In its defense, Harvard says that that a federally-mandated review board approved the project, though officials note that the assistant undergraduate dean will be consulted for any similar projects in the future.

Everykey Wants To Put Your Passwords On Your Wrist

Everykey Wants To Put Your Passwords On Your Wrist

Natasha Lomas
TechCrunch 



The password as a digital authenticator is under more strain than ever. But is the answer to memorizing multiple complex secure passwords to rely on proximity and a physical wristband for logging in to devices and websites? The U.S.-based makers of a device called Everykey believe so.


They’re currently Kickstarting their wearable, looking to raise $100,000 to turn a prototype Bluetooth-powered authentication wristband into shipping product by March next year.

They’re not the only ones eyeing up the security potential of wearables either, with Apple’s forthcoming Watch apparently relying on a biometric heart rate for authentication when using its NFC-powered Apple Pay function. And Toronto-based startup Nymi also working on a heart-wave sensing authentication wearable. (We saw a demo of their wristband back in April.)

Everykey is following a similar wearable route to Nymi, with a basic wristband that has a single security-focused purpose, but is not bothering with any biometrics, which does mean you’re putting your passwords in a single unsecured physical basket (i.e. a form that can be stolen and used by someone else to log into your stuff).

Why is it avoiding any biometric component? Everykey CEO Chris Wentz expresses scepticism about acquiring accurate electrocardiogram data — as Nymi aims to do — via a single wearable point, i.e. rather than having multiple electrodes on the body. Hence Everykey staying away from biometrics.

It’s also aiming to undercut Nymi on price — given that there’s less sensor kit required inside its wristband it can offer the wearable at a lower price point. The Everykey is up for pre-order via Kickstarter for $50, vs Nymi costing $79. It also offers better battery life, of up to a month.

Wentz says it is expending effort on making it’s wristband look a bit more #FASHION than the average generic plastic bangle. Although, to my eye, there’s not a huge amount in it…

What about the inherent insecurity of putting physical passwords in an easily stealable form? “You can disable your Everykey at any time just like a credit card by calling us or deactivating it through our website,” was Wentz’s response. So this is absolutely a trade off between convenience and security.

But, given how troublesome passwords are becoming, it may be a trade-off some people are willing to make. The problem of too simplistic passwords is huge and growing, with hackers data-mining leaked repositories of passwords to get better at guessing the words humans use to try to secure their digital stuff.

If a password is simple enough to be memorable, chances are it’s hackable. But more complex passwords are also starting to be cracked as hackers train their systems on leaked password data to get better at brute forcing our 0p3n s3s4m3s.

Password manager software, such as LastPass or PasswordBox, is one answer to this growing password-generated security gap. Everykey’s wearable device, which uses proximity and Bluetooth to work with a range of devices as well as websites, is another — although the wearable won’t support authenticating mobile apps unless developers integrate Everykey’s SDK. So it’s not a case of one ‘wrist-ring’ to unlock them all.

The Everykey wearable does not store any passwords itself, acting purely as an authenticator, via an encrypted signal sent over Bluetooth 4.0 when the wristband is within a customisable range to the Bluetooth device you are using. Device passwords are stored on the devices themselves in keychains, while website passwords are encrypted and stored on Everykey’s servers.

The use of Bluetooth 4.0 limits which devices it can unlock, unless you add a Bluetooth dongle to older hardware. While iOS unlocking will only work for jailbroken devices. For PC users, Everykey is also only compatible with Windows 8.1+; older versions of Windows aren’t supported, so again that’s a limit to its usefulness.

What about website compatibility? “Every website I’ve tried Everykey on has worked with Everykey.  Our algorithm for identifying a login field is pretty well refined and while we can’t guarantee that it will work with all websites, it’s very reliable and works on all the top websites (Facebook, Gmail, Twitter, etc) as well as every other website we’ve tried it on,” says Wentz.

“In terms of the devices themselves, Android, iOS, Windows, Mac OS, and Linux are all supported — keeping in mind that iOS requires a jailbreak for the device unlock itself,” he adds.

There is apparently no limit on the number of close-by devices that can be authenticated via the wristband — a tech it has filed a patent on. However it’s still working on ways to support logins to websites where a user has multiple accounts, so might want to specify which account to log in to. Managing multiple Everykeys owned and used in close proximity to each other also sounds like it will require some additional thought to avoid the wrong user being logged in.

To set up Everykey for unlocking supported devices entails downloading an Everykey app, then pairing it with the wristband (pushing a button on the device to activate pairing mode) — and then typing in a unique code printed on the back.

When logging into a website for the first time Everykey automatically encrypts and store your username and password for that website, via a browser extension (once you’ve installed its software). The companion software can also be used to generate a complex password, as other password manager software offerings do, if you don’t want to come up with a tough enough string yourself.

Everykey looks to be — at best — a partial fix to a messy problem, and one that evidently prioritizes fashionable convenience over security.

Adding a two-factor authentication feature that loops in the proximity of the mobile user’s phone to bolster security would be a welcome addition but isn’t currently offered. “Two factor authentication is something we’re interested in, it’s not yet a feature but may become one if there’s enough demand,” says Everykey, responding to comments on its Kickstarter campaign.

With caveats like these it’s clear Everykey won’t be for everyone. But it’s managed to pull in close to half its $100,000 funding goal thus far, still with almost two weeks left on the clock, so this wearable password manager may yet fly. If its makers get their prototype to market, how smoothly it flies and how far it travels remains to be seen.


Friday, 7 November 2014

Taylor Swift Defends Pulling Her Music From Spotify

Taylor Swift Defends Pulling Her Music From Spotify

Taylor Swift is defending her decision to break up with the popular streaming music service Spotify and as of now, it doesn't look like the two will get back together. Like, ever.
The 24-year-old country-turned-pop star and songwriter's move came soon after she released her anticipated new album, 1989, which has sold more than 1.2 million copies in its first week, and three months after she declared in a Wall Street Journal op-ed that, in her opinion, "music should not be free." The record was also leaked early, which angered many fans.
"If I had streamed the new album, it's impossible to try to speculate what would have happened," Swift told Yahoo! Music in an interview posted on Thursday. "But all I can say is that music is changing so quickly, and the landscape of the music industry itself is changing so quickly, that everything new, like Spotify, all feels to me a bit like a grand experiment. And I'm not willing to contribute my life's work to an experiment that I don't feel fairly compensates the writers, producers, artists, and creators of this music. And I just don't agree with perpetuating the perception that music has no value and should be free."
Spotify offers both paid subscription and free, ad-incorporated services, and has been criticized itself over how much it compensates artists and others involved in the music creation process. According to its website, music rights holders are paid an average of 0.6 cents to 0.84 cents per stream, which can total thousands of dollars for popular artists and songs but often just pennies for lesser-known acts.
"A lot of people were suggesting to me that I try putting new music on Spotify with "Shake It Off," and so I was open-minded about it," she told Yahoo! Music. "I thought, 'I will try this; I'll see how it feels.' It didn't feel right to me. I felt like I was saying to my fans, 'If you create music someday, if you create a painting someday, someone can just walk into a museum, take it off the wall, rip off a corner off it, and it's theirs now and they don't have to pay for it.' I didn't like the perception that it was putting forth. And so I decided to change the way I was doing things."

John Lasseter To Direct ‘Toy Story 4′ For 2017 Bow

John Lasseter To Direct ‘Toy Story 4′ For 2017 Bow

The Deadline Team
Deadline 



John Lasseter will direct Toy Story 4 and it will be out in June 2017, Disney boss Bob Iger just said in its earnings call with analysts. This is a bit of a shocker as the principals behind the three Disney/Pixar hits have often said there were no plans for a fourth pic in the franchise after Toy Story 3 came out in 2010 and grossed $1.063B worldwide, making it the top-grossing animated film of all time until Frozen overtook it earlier this year.
Lasseter, now chief creative office of Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios, directed the first two pics before turning over the threequel to Lee Unkrich.

Microsoft makes Office free to rival mobile platforms

Microsoft makes Office free to rival mobile platforms

Relaxnews 


Image Credit: AFP 
Microsoft announced Thursday it was making its Office software suite available for free to users of rival mobile operating systems from Apple and Google.
Users of Apple iPads and other devices and those with Android tablets will be able to use the apps to store documents without a subscription, Microsoft said.
The software includes the popular document software Word as well as the Excel spreadsheet program. Microsoft earlier this year released the Office app for iPad, but users needed to pay an annual license fee for cloud-based Office 365.
"Today, we're taking the next major step to bring Office to everyone, on every device," Microsoft vice president John Case said in a statement.
"So, starting today, people can create and edit Office content on iPhones, iPads, and soon, Android tablets using Office apps without an Office 365 subscription."
Case noted that subscribers will "benefit from the full Office experience across devices with advanced editing and collaboration capabilities," and other advantages including cloud storage and integration with Dropbox.
Microsoft said its Office for iPad application had been downloaded 40 million times, and that a new version was being released this week.
Microsoft has some one billion customers around the world who use Office in some form. The cloud-based Office 365 will still require a subscription for use on a standard PC.
Office for iPad and Office for iPhone apps are available in 29 languages and 136 countries, Microsoft said. It will be offering a preview version of Office for Android for users of some devices.
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Amazon launches a speaker you can talk to

Amazon launches a speaker you can talk to

Reuters


Do you want to talk to your speaker? Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) has launched "Amazon Echo", a speaker you leave on all day and give it voice directions, like Siri on an Apple Inc (AAPL.O) iPhone.
As well as taking commands such as "play music by Bruno Mars" or "add gelato to my shopping list", Amazon said the device accesses the internet to answer questions such as "when is Thanksgiving?" and "what is the weather forecast?"
Amazon said the speaker, which runs on Amazon Web Services, continually learns a user's speech patterns and preferences.
Users start the speaker up saying the wake up word, "Alexa".
They can then feed Amazon Echo commands or questions or, if they want, wirelessly stream music web services such as Spotify, iTunes and Pandora via their mobiles.
Amazon Echo is priced at $199, or $99 for members for the online retail giant's Amazon Prime loyalty scheme. It is available on an invitation-only basis in coming weeks.
Amazon has had an unusually busy year, developing a mobile phone, video productions and grocery deliveries.
Last month, the company forecast sales for the crucial holiday quarter that disappointed Wall Street and investors who are eager to see Amazon curtail its ambitions and start delivering sustainable profits.
(Reporting by Soham Chatterjee in Bangalore; Editing by Rodney Joyce)

'Smart' living gets real as connectivity rates rise

'Smart' living gets real as connectivity rates rise

AFP 


From robots that chop up your vegetables to detectors that measure how long you sleep, such "smart" appliances are becoming more and more a part of daily life, according to industry players.
Developers at the Dublin Web Summit, one of Europe's biggest technology conferences, said interlinkage between people, their homes and their devices were opening up new frontiers.
The developers of Everycook, a cooking device that takes in raw material and independently processes it to a finished meal, hope their product will transform healthy-eating.
"You go to our app, pick a recipe, get the ingredients, follow the instructions and Everycook does the rest," founder Maximilian Tornow told AFP.

Boston-based Chris Cicchitelli, founder and CEO of CastleOS, said his system would revolutionise geriatric care, allowing older people to remain out of nursing homes for longer.
"Using motion detectors and sensors connected to a smartphone, you'll know how active a person is, even how long they have spent in bed.

"You will know if they have fallen and if they do fall, the system can take action based on that, call 911 automatically, even say where in the house the fall took place."
With 22,000 attendees, the Web Summit brings together some of the world's top companies with start-up ideas for a series of lectures and networking events.

One of the focus areas at the Web Summit was on how people, objects and devices can become connected in what the tech industry is calling the "Internet of Things".
"We're trying to connect 99 percent of things, not only physical things such as street lights but people and even animals to transform lives and improve businesses," Wei Zou, technical marketing engineer with Cisco, told AFP.

'Less chaotic' traffic
Cisco estimates there will be 50 billion Internet-connect "things" in the world by 2020.
The US company's chief technology officer Padmasree Warrior said one benefit could be the end of traffic congestion when driverless cars become available on demand.

"These cars will also be connected to each other and to traffic lights, meaning the flow of traffic will be far more organised and less chaotic. That's the dream for the cities at least," she said.
On a larger scale, Cisco hopes the growth in connectivity will improve medical care by developing systems for hospitals, such as allowing paramedics to feed patient information back automatically while an ambulance is in transit, so hospitals can be prepared.

It also hopes to reduce the demand for resources by allowing patients to connect with doctors remotely.
"Some people with medical conditions do not need to go to the hospital, they can use digital media to provide the doctors with diagnostics remotely and automatically," Zou said.
One project demonstrated at the summit was "CitySense" in Dublin which monitors pollution through sensors fitted on courier bikes.

"The Internet of things places the citizen at the heart of all technologies," said Willie Donnelly, director of the Telecommunication Software and Systems Group (TSSG), a research centre taking part in the initiative.

While tech is big business mainly based in the developed world, a number of tech companies taking part outlined ambitions to revolutionise daily life in the developing world.
A US start-up said it hoped its kinetic energy-generating shoe insole could transform and increase the use of smartphones in areas of the world where there is no access to electricity.
"In the developing world, 1.2 billion people don't have access to electricity but have mobile technology -- that's a huge problem," Matt Stanton of Solepower told AFP.

"They use it increasingly for daily critical tasks, healthcare, banking, education. It's truly integrated into their lives but the power is not widely available to power the devices," he said.

Taylor Swift Posts Cutest Throwback Picture

Taylor Swift Posts Cutest Throwback Picture




Taylor Swift, 24, is on top of the world with her latest album, 1989, selling over 1.2 million copies in just one week! That’s seriously impressive! On Nov. 6, the “Shake It Off” singer posted a throwback picture of her younger self on Instagram to remind everyone how long it’s been since an album sold that many copies. 

Once news broke that her new album, 1989, had sold 1.2 million copies in it’s first week, Taylor shared this photo with a very interesting caption:
“The last time an album sold as many copies as 1989 did first week, it was 2002, I was 12, and going through my ‘braids phase’. #nofilternecessary.”
The 2002 chart-topping album Taylor is referring to is Eminem‘s “The Eminem Show” which sold 1.322 million in its second chart week, according to Billboard. As proven from Taylor’s adorable picture, that was over a decade ago, and no artist has managed to accomplish that much success until now.

Ashley Tisdale New Extensions!

Ashley Tisdale New Extensions!


She can't make up her mind! Just weeks after debuting her blue hairAshley Tisdale is already showing off a brand new look. Long hair is definitely in style this season and it looks like Ashley agrees! The High School Musical star shared photos of her new honey blonde hair extensions on Instagram and we think she looks better than ever.
Take a look:


Nick Jonas Opens Up About His Solo Artist Transformation

Nick Jonas Opens Up About His Solo Artist Transformation


GETTY IMAGES
Nick Jonas' solo career is back up and running, and he's loving all of the attention his brand new solo tracks are getting! So far Nick has released the songs ChainsJealous and Teacher, and fans are having a hard time deciding which song is their ultimate favorite!
Nick spoke with Official Charts about the transformation he went through to get back into being a solo artist that was taken seriously. Here's what the former Jonas Brothers member revealed:
“I had a pretty clear vision actually. I took the mentality that nothing is off limits. I wanted to be completely open and transparent stepping into a new phase and with the idea that I’m starting over as a brand new artist. A lot of it has been intentional and some it has been out of my control. Basically, I’m just riding the wave and enjoying this new phase!"