Archive for August, 2017

Microsoft: LinkedIn Dealt a Blow in Data Case – Investopedia


Investopedia
Microsoft: LinkedIn Dealt a Blow in Data Case
Investopedia
According to The Wall Street Journal, since 2012 the startup has been collecting public data from the social network service without any objections. But more recently, LinkedIn wanted it to stop, arguing it has the right to control access to its ...
LinkedIn loses court fight over user data privacyToronto Star
Microsoft ordered to let third parties scrape LinkedIn dataThe Verge

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Microsoft: LinkedIn Dealt a Blow in Data Case - Investopedia

Apple, Facebook, others urge Supreme Court to change Fourth Amendment privacy doctrines – Washington Examiner

Several of the largest technology companies in the nation filed a brief urging the Supreme Court to enhance Fourth Amendment protections for consumers by changing the way the amendment is applied to meet the public's expectation of privacy.

Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Twitter, Verizon, and several other tech companies filed a brief late Monday night in Carpenter v. United States, a case the high court will hear next term regarding the constitutionality of the warrantless search and seizure of cellphone records showing the location and movements of the phone's user.

The tech giants made no explicit statement regarding how they want the case to be decided, but they wrote in their brief that the Supreme Court "should refine the application of certain Fourth Amendment doctrines to ensure that the law realistically engages with Internet-based technologies and with people's expectations of privacy in their digital data."

"The number and variety of organizations and experts filing represent the widespread recognition that your cell phone's location history is your own business, and the government needs to have a good reason to get its hands on it," said Nathan Freed Wessler, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, in a statement. "In particular, the tech firms are sending a very clear message that the law needs to catch up with the technology that is now an integral part of our everyday lives." The ACLU is one of the groups representing Timothy Carpenter, the petitioner.

No date has yet been set for Carpenter v. United States' oral arguments.

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Apple, Facebook, others urge Supreme Court to change Fourth Amendment privacy doctrines - Washington Examiner

Former NSA Official: Dems’ Russia Hacking Story Likely Bogus | Fox … – Fox News Insider

'He Sat On This': Judge Nap Reacts to Reports Obama Knew Russian Meddled in 2014

Antifa Protester: Trump's Denouncement of White Supremacists 'Too Little Too Late'

Former National Security Administration Technical Director Bill Binney told Tucker Carlson he has data showing that the Democrats' narrative regarding Russia hacking the DNC and 2016 election are untrue.

Binney, a member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), said the story spread around the mainstream media that Russia is at fault can't necessarily be proven.

He said that during a prior Chinese hack of government systems, NSA agents were able to use "trace route programs" to track the "packets" of information back to a specific building in Shanghai.

Binney said that could be the reason Democrats did not want the FBI to look at their systems- ostensibly because they may not trace back to Russia.

He said a major file that was allegedly hacked from the DNC server was 1,976 megabytes in size and was transmitted in only 87 seconds.

"You made the point that it was moved too fast [that it] couldn't have gone out over the internet," Tucker Carlson surmised.

Binney said it likely was instead transmitted to a storage device.

"Many people are emotionally tied to this agenda, to tie the Russians to President Trump," Binney said.

He said that VIPS is nonpartisan and "tries to look at... the facts."

Watch more above.

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Protesters Assemble in Front of Trump Tower Awaiting the President

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Former NSA Official: Dems' Russia Hacking Story Likely Bogus | Fox ... - Fox News Insider

EaseUS Giveaway Win Paid Products For Free In Seconds – Fossbytes

EaseUS, in collaboration with Fossbytes, is announcing a free giveaway of various EaseUS products for Windows operating system.

EaseUS just turned 13 and this giveaway is being hosted as a way of giving back to users who have made EaseUS flourish all these years by using their products. Open to anyone, the free EaseUS productsincluded in the giveaway are:

EaseUS Free Giveaway

Once you visit the Anniversary Campaign page using the link mentioned above, you find a magic wheel. Clicking the same would provide you the license key and download link of any one of the products which are a part of the giveaway.

The AnniversaryCelebration allows you to win some cash as Paypal gift cards. All you need to do is make some great EaseUS anniversaryor product memes and submit them. The prize is decided on the basis of public votes on your meme.

If you are a regular reader at Fossbytes, you might haveseen our post about this file recovery software in the past. For a recap, salient features of the EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Pro include:

The recovery software isnt limited to English but tries to expandits reach to customers around the globe by including support for different languages.

Another advantage youll see while recovering files is that the data recovery software preserves the original folder hierarchy, which isnt a feature youll find in many recovery software. This makes it pretty easy to pin point the exact file you want to get back.

As per latest update, EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Pro comes with improved import/export quality for scan status and previewsupport for PPT, PPTX, and PDF file formats before recovery.

To know more about the data recovery software, you can take a look at our detailed post.

EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Pro comes for both Windows and MacOS. The Windows version is availablefor $69.95 but you can get it for free as the part of the giveaway.

As a goodie of the 13th Anniversary Celebration, its available at a discounted price of $44.97.

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EaseUS Giveaway Win Paid Products For Free In Seconds - Fossbytes

The ‘doctor’s bag of the future’ could be a 3-D printer – News8000.com – WKBT

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(CNN) - Astronauts have always had to pack light. Luckily, when they've visited the moon or lived on the International Space Station, Earth is literally in sight. And if they had a medical issue or injury, home wouldn't be far away.

But for astronauts on future deep-space missions, like one to Mars, even a simple radio message might take up to 20 minutes to reach Earth. So how can they pack light and still bring all of the necessities, especially with an increased risk of injury during a six-month flight?

The answer could be what Dr. Julielynn Wong calls the "doctor's bag of the future": 3-D printing.

In January, Wong was the first to 3-D print a medical supply in space. Using a laser hand scan saved from the fitting process for space gloves, free software and a 3-D printer on the space station, she created a customized finger splint.

Hand injuries are common in astronauts. When they're in zero gravity, their hands and arms operate like their legs and feet since they grip and pull themselves from place to place rather than walking. Mallet finger injuries, which involve the tendon that straightens the end joint of fingers and thumbs, are the most common.

Finger splints may need to be worn for up to two months, coming off only once a day to clean the skin. Little holes in the splint allow the skin to breathe.

In addition to customizing the splints for the shape of astronauts' fingers, Wong arranged the holes into a star pattern.

Wong knew that the splints would work because in 2014, she and her colleagues printed 10 surgical instruments and tested them in a study against standard steel instruments. They worked equally well, but the 3-D ones could be printed in space -- or in rural and remote areas on Earth that lack access.

Wong combined her interests in public health and aerospace medicine -- for which she is dual board-certified -- to found 3D4MD, a company that 3-D prints medical supplies on-site wherever they are needed. Her "Medical Makers" around the world design medical tools and assistive devices, which can be created with free software and 3-D printers in libraries, clinics or someone's home.

The global community of innovators, patients and health care providers at 3D4MD has designed complex prosthetics for patients with missing or amputated limbs and simple solutions inspired by the needs of its own employees who have disabilities.

"We have hundreds of people across 10 countries crowdsourcing low-cost solutions to save lives, time and money," Wong said. "We have projects with humanitarian medical organizations like Doctors Without Borders to train workers on how to scan and 3-D print in the field."

This way, if medical equipment breaks in the field, Makers can design a digital fix for a part, ensure that it's printable and send it back in an email so the part may be printed on-site.

To help build the catalog of cheap, printable supplies, tools and devices, 3D4MD also hosts "make-a-thons" around the world. People of all ages, some who have never 3-D printed anything come together to brainstorm, design and create solutions to challenges that are presented.

Some of the items 3D4MD has designed and printed include simple solutions like a cupholder and bookstand that can be attached to a wheelchair as well as an insulin syringe handle that can be used by diabetes patients with limited use of their hands. The designs cost only a few dollars to make.

"We don't start designing solutions until we've met a patient or health care provider, because we have to understand their needs or challenges," Wong said. "We always ask them to take us through their day. And we want to empower patients to create the solutions they need the most."

The launch of the first 3-D printer to the space station in 2014 has inspired others with its potential, including a partnership between NASA and the American Society for Mechanical Engineers.

Together, they created Future Engineers, which issues two challenges a year to students from kindergarten to 12th grade to create 3-D designs for space.

Every challenge represents a real need that astronauts have identified, from tools and containers to food solutions and medical challenges that Mars astronauts may face. Experts judge the designs and interview with the finalists before declaring two winners, one under 13 and one over 13.

"These students are not only coming up with extremely innovative designs, but they're learning 3-D design skills that are imperative for the future of space and on Earth," said Deanne Bell, founder of Future Engineers.

The most recent challenge was to design a medical 3-D print that could be used for the journey to Mars. The two winning prints were a dual IV/syringe pump that overcomes the issue of zero gravity when administering IVs in space and a delivery device that astronauts can use to administer epinephrine and other drugs in self-treatment.

With 3-D printers showing up in classrooms across the country, students who may normally be turned off by math and science are realizing that they too can be engineers.

"It's extremely important to include the student aspect, because 3-D printing is a rapidly developing area, and we need skill sets to design functional parts that work," said Niki Werkheiser, NASA's In-space Manufacturing project manager. "Whether or not these kids go on to become engineers, and I think many of them will, seeing them feel that empowerment and controlling their destiny is extremely powerful, and those are the qualities we look for. So many of the problems we work through at NASA don't fit into a box."

Bell and Werkheiser, who work closely on Future Engineers, both wish they had had such opportunities when they were students.

"I was probably 18 before I held the first part in my hand that I designed on a computer," said Bell, a mechanical engineer. "These kids are making their ideas, printing and holding them and understanding the basics of engineering at a young age."

Werkheiser's department at NASA also works with universities and small businesses that are working on printable medical solutions for the future. Printable designs will be able to help astronauts with dental care, custom casts for fractures and sprains, sustainable tips for thermometers, vitamins, antibiotics, skin grafts and even food.

In turn, these devices can be used on Earth in remote areas that can't afford access to these items or types of care.

"So much of what we do at NASA is about making life better on Earth," Wekheiser said. "3-D printing evens the playing field so that you can create or make wherever you are."

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The 'doctor's bag of the future' could be a 3-D printer - News8000.com - WKBT