Facebook Heading to Court For Reading Your Private Messages

 

Facebook is facing a new class action lawsuit for scanning private user messages to improve its targeted ads. Reuters reports that the company’s effort to get the case dismissed were thwarted by U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton, in a ruling on Tuesday in Oakland, California.

The lawsuit dates back to 2013, and alleges that Facebook scanned private chats for links to websites and equated them with public “likes.” So, for example, if you sent your friend a link to a YouTube video, you might see more ads on Facebook related to that topic.

The company says it ended this practice in 2012, and now only scans private chats for spam and viruses. Facebook’s lawyers also argued that its actions were protected under the Federal Electronic Communications Privacy Act. Regardless, the world’s largest social network is heading to court, though it’s unclear when the trial will begin.

 

 

 

Most needed mozilla addons for hackers

 

Firefox, No doubt one of the best and popular internet browser . but many of us don’t know a lot of thing which can make it perfect browser for computer geeks. So now i’m going to tell you some important firefox addons we must have.

1. FOX TAB

3D in your browser! FoxTab brings innovative 3D functionality to your Firefox. Now you can access your most favorite sites from the familiar FoxTab interface. FoxTab is a popular 3D tab management extension.

FoxTab powers Firefox with the following main features:

  • Top Sites (aka Speed Dial) for quickly accessing your favorite web sites.
  • Tab Flipper – to easily flip between opened tabs using mouse or keyboard gestures.
  • Recently Closed Tabs – for reopening a tab that was recently closed.
  • Choose between 6 attractive 3D layouts.

Download Link:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/8879/

 

2. GREASE MONKEY

Grease monkey extension allows you to customize the way a webpage displays using small bits of JavaScript. …!!

Download Link:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/748/

 

3. TAMPER DATA:

Use tamperdata to view and modify HTTP/HTTPS headers and post parameters. Trace and time http response/requests. Security test web applications by modifying POST parameters.
FYI current version of Google Web Accelerator is incompatible with the tampering function of TamperData. Your browser will crash.

Download Link:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/966/

 

4. XSS ME

Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) is a common flaw found in todays web applications. XSS flaws can cause serious damage to a web application. Detecting XSS vulnerabilities early in the development process will help protect a web application from unnecessary flaws. XSS-Me is the Exploit-Me tool used to test for reflected XSS vulnerabilities

Download Link:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/7598/

 

5. Sparky

Sparky is Alexa Internet’s free Firefox status bar plugin. Sparky accompanies you as you surf, providing you with Alexa data about the sites you visit without interrupting your browsing.

  • Discover website traffic trends — Is this site getting more popular, or less?
  • Get detailed traffic information including Reach and Rank — How does this site’s traffic compare to other sites on the Web?
  • Surf more efficiently with Related Links for each page — If I like this site, are there others that I might want to visit?
  • Gracefully navigate past dead end error pages — Enable Sparky’s optional custom error handling to get relevant alternative links when your browser encounters a network error.

Plus, as you browse with Sparky, you’re helping to make the Web a better place for everybody by contributing to the traffic information that Alexa provides.

Download Link:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/5362/

 

6. SQL INJECT ME

SQL Injection vulnerabilites can cause a lot of damage to a web application. A malicious user can possibly view records, delete records, drop tables or gain access to your server. SQL Inject-Me is Firefox Extension used to test for SQL Injection vulnerabilities.
SQL Inject Me is the Exploit-Me tool used to test for SQL Injection vulnerabilities.

The tool works by submitting your HTML forms and substituting the form value with strings that are representative of an SQL Injection attack.
The tool works by sending database escape strings through the form fields. It then looks for database error messages that are output into the rendered HTML of the page.

The tool does not attempting to compromise the security of the given system. It looks for possible entry points for an attack against the system. There is no port scanning, packet sniffing, password hacking or firewall attacks done by the tool.

Download Link:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/7597/

 

7. HACKBAR

This toolbar will help you in testing sql injections, XSS holes and site security. It is NOT a tool for executing standard exploits and it will NOT teach you how to hack a site. Its main purpose is to help a developer do security audits on his code. If you know what your doing, this toolbar will help you do it faster. If you want to learn to find security holes, you can also use this toolbar, but you will probably also need a book, a lot of Google and a brain :)

# The advantages are:
– Even the most complicated urls will be readable
– The focus will stay on the textarea, so after executing the url (Ctrl+Enter) you can just go on typing / testing
– The url in textarea is not affected by redirects.
– I tend to use it as a notepad :)
– Useful tools like on the fly uu/url decoding etc.
– All functions work on the currently selected text.
– MD5/SHA1/SHA256 hashing
– MySQL/MS SQL Server/Oracle shortcuts
– XSS useful functions
– And lots more ;) Go test it!

# Shortcuts

– Load url ( Alt + A )
– Split url ( Alt + S )
– Execute ( Alt + X, Ctrl + Enter )
– INT -1 ( Alt – )
– INT +1 ( Alt + )
– HEX -1 ( Ctrl Alt – )
– HEX +1 ( Ctrl + Alt + )
– MD5 Hash ( Alt + M )
– MySQL CHAR() ( Alt + Y )
– MS SQL Server CHAR() ( Alt + Q )

Download Link:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/3899/

 

 

Images to confuse google image search

Image recognition algorithms are becoming widely used in many products and services.


Images like these were created to trick machine learning algorithms. The software sees each pattern as one of the digits 1 to 5.

A technique called deep learning has enabled Google and other companies to make breakthroughs in getting computers to understand the content of photos. Now researchers at Cornell University and the University of Wyoming have shown how to make images that fool such software into seeing things that aren’t there.

The researchers can create images that appear to a human as scrambled nonsense or simple geometric patterns, but are identified by the software as an everyday object such as a school bus. The trick images offer new insight into the differences between how real brains and the simple simulated neurons used in deep learning process images.

Researchers typically train deep learning software to recognize something of interest—say, a guitar—by showing it millions of pictures of guitars, each time telling the computer “This is a guitar.” After a while, the software can identify guitars in images it has never seen before, assigning its answer a confidence rating. It might give a guitar displayed alone on a white background a high confidence rating, and a guitar seen in the background of a grainy cluttered picture a lower confidence rating.

That approach has valuable applications such as facial recognition, or using software to process security or traffic camera footage, for example to measure traffic flows or spot suspicious activity.

But although the mathematical functions used to create an artificial neural network are understood individually, how they work together to decipher images is unknown. “We understand that they work, just not how they work,” says Jeff Clune, an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Wyoming. “They can learn to do things that we can’t even learn to do ourselves.”

These images look abstract to humans, but are seen by the image recognition algorithm they were designed to fool as the objects described in the labels.

To shed new light on how these networks operate, Clune’s group used a neural network called AlexNet that has achieved impressive results in image recognition. They operated it in reverse, asking a version of the software with no knowledge of guitars to create a picture of one, by generating random pixels across an image.

The researchers asked a second version of the network that had been trained to spot guitars to rate the images made by the first network. That confidence rating was used by the first network to refine its next attempt to create a guitar image. After thousands of rounds of this between the two pieces of software, the first network could make an image that the second network recognized as a guitar with 99 percent confidence.

However, to a human, those “guitar” images looked like colored TV static or simple patterns. Clune says this shows that the software is not interested in piecing together structural details like strings or a fretboard, as a human trying to identify something might be. Instead, the software seems to be looking at specific distance or color relationships between pixels, or overall color and texture.
That offers new insight into how artificial neural networks really work, says Clune, although more research is needed.

Ryan Adams, an assistant computer science professor at Harvard, says the results aren’t completely surprising. The fact that large areas of the trick images look like seas of static probably stems from the way networks are fed training images. The object of interest is usually only a small part of the photo, and the rest is unimportant.

Adams also points out that Clune’s research shows humans and artificial neural networks do have some things in common. Humans have been thinking they see everyday objects in random patterns—such as the stars—for millennia.

Clune says it would be possible to use his technique to fool image recognition algorithms when they are put to work in Web services and other products. However, it would be very difficult to pull off. For instance, Google has algorithms that filter out pornography from the results of its image search service. But to create images that would trick it, a prankster would need to know significant details about how Google’s software was designed.

 

 

US will be faster with high speed internet

socket for internet connection

Thought Google Fiber’s gigabit connections sounded fast? Forget about that — it’s going to be like dialing-in to 56k for folks in Minneapolis. US Internet has just announced that it’s bring 10 gigabit-per-second connections to the city next summer. The service costs a steep $400 a month, but “regular” gigabit internet will be available for a more palatable $65. The firm’s high-end connections will only be available to 30,000 households west of the interstate, but it’s a step in the right direction.

Minnesota isn’t the only state in the region getting a connectivity upgrade: the hills of eastern Kentucky are getting overhauled, too. The state’s eastern mountains aren’t typically known as a hub of technology, but state legislators have struck a deal that could change that. Over the next several years, Macquarie Capital will build a “ring” of fiber that runs through five Kentucky counties, eventually lighting up the entire state by the rend of 2018.

“Eastern Kentucky will bee equal to the word in limitless technology,” Congressmen Hal Rogers said of the deal. “No more boundaries sketched by our terrain, no more boundaries for high tech work.” Rogers says that fiber “levels” the Appalachian mountains, enabling the state to create a “Silicon Holler” that will keep Kentucky current.

 

 

Google Makes update to Find Song Lyrics

google-search-lyrics

I actually spotted this update the other day when I was searching for lyrics to a Frank Sinatra song, but it’s now apparently official. Google has rolled out a new feature into Google Search that makes it easier than ever to find the song lyrics you’re searching for.  If you type “Frank Sinatra New York, New York,” lyrics into Google Search, for example, you’ll now see the full list of lyrics to the song.

At the bottom of the song, there’s a link to “Full Lyrics on Google Play,” which redirects you right into the Google Play Music Store where you can read them all, or choose to buy the song directly. It’s a brilliant way for Google to bring people right into its ecosystem, and it could increase sales if folks are searching for lyrics to a song they’re trying to buy or re-listen to. According to TechCrunch, it’s all part of a big boost to Google’s “Knowledge Graph” search technology.

Some songs might not populate just yet, which suggests it’s a work in progress for Google. Still, if it keeps me away from navigating to typical lyric-providing sites, which are often chock-full of ads, then I’m a happier Google Search user.