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Clash Of Clans Gem Cheat Hack 2014 – Video


Clash Of Clans Gem Cheat Hack 2014
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Clash Of Clans Gem Cheat Hack 2014 - Video

Daddy’s bday 2014 – Video


Daddy #39;s bday 2014
I don #39;t own the background music. The song #39;Aloha #39; is credit to Cool. A Korean song was chosen because my dad simply loves its cheerful tune. [Behind the sce...

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Daddy's bday 2014 - Video

Sexy Car Animation – Making the same video with Free software – Video


Sexy Car Animation - Making the same video with Free software
http://cardesign.newunlockedgames.com - Get your free copy of Rhino 3d, Follow the tutorials included, and you should be good. Real easy.

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Sexy Car Animation - Making the same video with Free software - Video

With a Web built on free code, Heartbleed bug magnifies online world's messy nature

A major flaw revealed this week in widely used encryption software has highlighted one of the enduring and terrifying realities of the Internet: It is inherently chaotic, built by multitudes and continuously tweaked, with nobody in charge of it all.

The Heartbleed bug, which security experts first publicly revealed on Monday, was a product of the online worlds makeshift nature. While users see the logos of big, multibillion-dollar companies when they shop, bank and communicate over the Internet, nearly all of those companies rely on free software often built and maintained by volunteers to help make those services secure.

Heartbleed, security experts say, was lodged in a section of code that had been approved two years ago by a developer that helps maintain OpenSSL, a piece of free software created in the mid-1990s and still used by companies and government agencies almost everywhere.

While the extent of the damage caused by the bug may never be known, the possibilities for data theft are enormous. At the very least, many companies and government agencies will have to replace their encryption keys, and millions of users will have to create new passwords on sites where they are accustomed to seeing the small lock icon that symbolizes online encryption.

This was old code. Everyone depends on it. And I think that just everyone assumed that somebody else was dealing with it, said Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist for the American Civil Liberties Union.

The group that was actually dealing with it consisted of fewer than a dozen encryption enthusiasts sprawled across four continents. Many have never met each other in person. Their headquarters to the extent one exists at all is a sprawling home office outside Frederick, Md., on the shoulders of Sugarloaf Mountain, where a single employee lives and works amid racks of servers and an industrial-grade Internet connection.

The total donations to the group last year, in support of work that keeps billions of dollars of commerce and countless personal secrets flowing safely across the Internet: less than $2,000. The group also makes money from consulting work.

When you consider how complicated and significant a piece of software it is, and how critical a piece of infrastructure it is, it is kind of mind-boggling, said Steve Marquess, president of the OpenSSL Software Foundation and a former federal technology contractor who works out of his Frederick-area house. Its such a thin thread.

The Internet grew from research by the Defense Department in the late 1960s, but there has never been a master plan. One group built the Web browser, another search technology, another payment networks. Still others made the encryption technology that is increasingly demanded and scrutinized in the aftermath of revelations by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden about the power and pervasiveness of Internet surveillance.

Heartbleed, named for an OpenSSL feature called Heartbeat, was discovered by a Google researcher and, separately, by a Finland-based security company, Codenomicon.

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With a Web built on free code, Heartbleed bug magnifies online world's messy nature

On Racism: 'This Is Our Heritage. You Can't Get Away From It' | WUNC

Last month, Michael Dunn was convicted of attempted murder, after firing several rounds into an SUV of young black men. Jordan Davis, a 17-year-old, was killed in the incident. Dunn is 47, and he is white. Dunn invoked the "Stand Your Ground Law" to defend his actions, and the jury was deadlocked on whether to charge him for Davis's murder. He'll face a retrial this summer.

Ta-Nehisi Coates, a correspondent for The Atlantic had this to say on the trial:

A very wise man wrote me the other day and said he would have been happier if Dunn had been convicted of first-degree murder, gotten 15 years, and then was released to try to pick up the pieces of his life. And I think that really gets to the point. This is not about the ruination of white peopleindividual or collective. This is about coping with a heritage of regarding black people as subhuman.

Coates has been one of the foremost voices on issues of race, politics, and the law for the past decade. Tonight, he'll be giving the Robert R. Wilson lecture at Duke University on the topic of racism as a cultural heritage.

Coates sat down to talk with Phoebe Judge a few hours before his talk. They met in the lobby of the Washington Duke Inn, adjacent the school.

"Anywhere you look at domestic policy in this country, you can find it being accomplished, regrettably, on the basis of racism," Coates said. Coates and Judge talked about domestic cotton production, black exclusion from social security, and about redlining in the mid-20th century. "This is our heritage and you can't get away from it."

"The expectation that our citizens will make decisions outside of our heritage, our history, is deeply bizarre."

This idea, that racism is sewed into the very foundation of this country, is what makes decisions like that in the Jordan Davis case so resonant, Coates said.

"The expectation is that you will get a jury of people who will go into a room, and somehow they will exist outside of America. Or that laws will be past outside of America. As if who you are and your history don't affect anything."

Coates hopes people will walk away from his lecture at Duke with a realistic understanding of the country that we live in. He wants to turn the conversation away from the moral failing of African Americans and towards, "the total and utter destruction of white supremacy."

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On Racism: 'This Is Our Heritage. You Can't Get Away From It' | WUNC