I am a committed toilet hacker. Yes, I am fiercely committed to making better, smarter and more accessible toilets. In fact, I want armies of purpose driven people pursuing this same mission. The reason that I am so passionate about this is that it is unacceptable that 2.6 billion people have zero access to a basic toilet. . Think about that number for a moment. In India, there are 3 cell phones for every toilet. Yes, you can call someone halfway around the world, but getting access to the most powerful health tool around is out of reach. Your options are the field, the street and worst of all the source of your drinkable water, the nearby river or lake. I am committed to taking on this challenge. The question is, how do you tackle a 2.6 billion person problem? The magnitude of that number is mind numbing, the subject is shrouded in taboo and the number of people who are even aware of the issue are few. Everyone is focused on the sexy sister of sanitation, water. Yet, I am committed to the underserved, under-invested and under-innovated sister, the toilet and access to basic hygiene. The answer on how to tackle this is to create a perpetual hack-attack.. Think about that number for a moment. In India, there are 3 cell phones for every toilet. Yes, you c. committed, toilet, hacker, fiercely, making, better, smarter. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In December 2010, a group of nearly 3000 activists under the name "Operation Payback" launched online attacks against PayPal, MasterCard, and Visa, briefly knocking the three financial services' sites offline and preventing consumers from accessing ATMs or online banking services. . The activists retaliated against the three companies for severing ties with WikiLeaks, an online repository for whistleblower data that had recently included thousands of secret communications from the U.S. State Department and other world governmental agencies. Nine months later more than a dozen people--most between the ages of 19 and 24--were arrested in connection with these denial-of-service (DoS) attacks, even as new attacks were hitting corporate, military, and government sites worldwide. The link for this article located at PC Advisor is no longer available. . The activists retaliated against the three companies for severing ties with WikiLeaks, an online rep. december, group, nearly, activists, under, 'operation, payback', launched, onlin. . Dave Wreski
In Shakespeare's Othello, Iago laments that "he that filches from me my good name/Robs me of that which not enriches him/And makes me poor indeed." In the modern world, by contrast, filching someone else's good name through identity theft can significantly . . . . In Shakespeare's Othello, Iago laments that "he that filches from me my good name/Robs me of that which not enriches him/And makes me poor indeed." In the modern world, by contrast, filching someone else's good name through identity theft can significantly enrich the criminal and impoverish the victim. Contrary to some views, identity theft is indeed about numbers and about money. A recent study by Meridian Research makes the projection that by 2006 the financial institution sector alone will lose $8 billion to identity theft. In addition, an estimated 500,000 to 700,000 people a year become victims of identity theft, and Federal Trade Commission data show that nearly 86,000 people filed identity theft complaints in 2001. Many of those people suffer significant financial loss. Furthermore, when terrorists exploit identity theft, the financial and human costs to society as a whole can be catastrophic. What's the proper response to identity theft? In a recent Perspectives column, David Holtzman properly notes that the nature of digital communications has helped to create an environment that facilitates identity theft. At the same time, he asserts that identity theft legislation will not effectively contain the problem, in part because "it's too difficult to enforce, let alone prove, for legal action to be an effective deterrent" and because "the basic ammo to load the judicial guns (for enforcement actions)--such as clear guidelines on identity--is not at hand." . Explore the impact of identity theft through the lens of Shakespeare's Othello. Understand its effects and responses.. Identity Theft, Financial Loss, Digital Communication. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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