Top messaging apps flat-out flunk EFF's security review

Some of the most widely used messaging apps in the world, including Google Hangouts, Facebook chat, Yahoo Messenger, and Snapchat, flunked a best-practices security test by advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).

The organization evaluated 39 messaging products based on seven criteria it believes such tools should meet in order to ensure the privacy and security of digital communications.

The reviewed products included mobile texting apps, instant messaging clients, voice and video calling software and email services. The results were published Tuesday under the form of a Secure Messaging Scorecard.

The EFF did not perform vulnerability assessments or in-depth technical analyses of the encryption implementations in the reviewed products. Instead it judged them based on principles and features it felt are necessary to protect communications from widespread Internet surveillance by governments, which includes data collection in transit or from online service providers.

When reviewing the products, the EFF asked the following questions:

Six applications, most of them open source, met all of the EFFs requirements: CryptoCat, a Web-based instant messaging application; ChatSecure, an encrypted chat client for iPhone and Android; TextSecure, a text messaging app for Android; RedPhone, an encrypted calling app for Android and Signal, its version for iOS; Silent Text and Silent Phone, the encrypted texting and calling apps by secure communications provider Silent Circle.

One of the few perfect scorers.

There were other apps that came close, failing on just one criteriathe annual code audit or the forward secrecy requirements. These products were Mailvelope, RetroShare, Subrosa, Jitsi, Adium, and Pidgin.

Of the mass-market products, Apples iMessage and FaceTime scored the highest, failing on only two requirementsthe availability of code for independent review and the out-of-band contact identity verification. This means they dont currently provide complete protection against sophisticated, targeted forms of surveillance, the EFF said.

Other widely used communication tools scored much worse, meeting only one or two of the seven requirements. This was the case of Google Hangouts, Facebook chat, Yahoo Messenger, Snapchat, WhatsApp, Viber, AIM, BlackBerry Messenger and several others. None of these products offer end-to-end encryption making communications through them susceptible to surveillance on the providers side.

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Top messaging apps flat-out flunk EFF's security review

Cryptocurrency Round-Up: BitPay's NFC Payment App and '1% of Consumers' Use Bitcoin

Bitcoin sees its price rise for the first time in over a week amid a market-wide upturn(IBTimes UK)

Bitcoin and other major cryptocurrencies have seen some respite from the recently tumbling prices, as all 10 of the most valuable altcoins saw positive market movement.

Bitcoin, dogecoin, peercoin and namecoin all rose in value by around 3.5%, while the largest gains from any of the big players came from darkcoin.

The anonymity-focussed altcoin saw a 9% price rise to take its market capitalisation above $8 million once again.

The Bitcoin Checkout app was announced at Money2020 and is available immediately on Android and "soon" on iOS.

"For retailers, accepting mobile payments is a growing trend, but none of today's industry offerings can provide a lower risk or lower cost than swiping a credit card," said Tony Gallippi, co-founder and executive chairman of BitPay.

"Accepting bitcoin can offer tremendous savings to merchants, especially merchants with a large international customer base, and BitPay's service combined with the new mobile app is a fantastic value for merchants."

A new study has found that more than 1% of consumers use bitcoin as a payment method, half of which use it as their primary payment method.

The survey of 1,000 online consumers, commissioned by digital commerce solution provider Avangate, looked at the evolution of mobile technology and how it is spawning the next generation of software and online services.

The study did not take into account transactions through online black marketplaces like Silk Road 2.0, which generally see cryptocurrencies used as the main form of payment.

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Cryptocurrency Round-Up: BitPay's NFC Payment App and '1% of Consumers' Use Bitcoin

Coinify’s Lasse Birk Olesen introduces Bitcoin to 300 executives from Google, Facebook, Telenor etc – Video


Coinify #39;s Lasse Birk Olesen introduces Bitcoin to 300 executives from Google, Facebook, Telenor etc
Lasse Birk Olesen is CPO of Coinify https://coinify.com Original Video http://tv.digitalwinners.no/lasse-birk-olesen-coinify Bitcoin Address:1EtNAS4V3N1iqBiM...

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Coinify's Lasse Birk Olesen introduces Bitcoin to 300 executives from Google, Facebook, Telenor etc - Video

Bitcoin Brothers Petahash Mining — UK Treasury to consult Bitcoiners — MadBitcoins in Vegas! – Video


Bitcoin Brothers Petahash Mining -- UK Treasury to consult Bitcoiners -- MadBitcoins in Vegas!
Sponsored by http://RBBI.co -- a trusted name in precious metals Donate: https://blockchain.info/address/1LAYuQq6f11HccBgbe6bx8DiwKwzuYkPR3 Subscribe: http://patreon.com/madbitcoins ...

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Bitcoin Brothers Petahash Mining -- UK Treasury to consult Bitcoiners -- MadBitcoins in Vegas! - Video

Bitcoin & Beanie Babies: How to Spot a Tech Bubble

We're headed into another collapse. All the signs are there, and the latest portent of tech-doom is bitcoin.

I've personally witnessed at least two tech bubbles. One was in the 1980s, triggered by the game console market collapse in 1982-1983, which would later affect the computer industry. More recently was the dotcom collapse of 1999-2000, which was exacerbated by money wasted on Y2K scams followed by the 9/11 attacks, throwing everything into a tailspin.

If you were to take this as a cycle of perhaps 17 years then it should happen again in 2016-2017. This coincides with a lot of economic doomsaying.

These collapses are visible to those on the lookout. Anthony B. "Tony" Perkins released a book in 1999, just months before the collapse began in earnest, called The Internet Bubble. If everyone had sold every bit of equity owned the day the first edition came out, they'd have been in great shape. But nobody was interested at the time.

I'm personally fascinated by these ups and downs and there is no doubt that one is underway now. Just look for the signals.

One is simply what you hear on the street. Comments like "Wow, that's nuts." Or "Apple is the most valuable company in the world."

During these massive bubble-creating upswings the news becomes vacuous, as if nobody wants to do any real thinking when things are going so well. Take, for example, the publicity garnered over the past few weeks by Taylor Swift (look, even I am writing about her). For what? A new album? How is this news? Why has she appeared on every news show? Even my friend at The Register, Andrew Orlowski, wrote about how she is taking her music off Spotify without noticing that this too was a publicity stunt. This is a sure sign of a bubble. In 1999, the Taylor Swift icon was Britney Spears. Perhaps Olivia Newton-John or Joan Jett in 1982. Seventeen years earlier it was Diana Ross.

Of course these pop icons come and go and may not be a harbinger. But there's one thing I'm convinced is a harbinger: an insane illogical fad. In 1999 it was Beanie Babies.

Today it is bitcoin.

I've said before that bitcoins are the new Beanie Babies, and suffice it to say that it looks, sounds, and feels like the Beanie Baby era without the TV shows that cropped up around the stupid stuffed animals.

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Bitcoin & Beanie Babies: How to Spot a Tech Bubble

Innovations: The liberating idea behind Pragues bitcoin-only cafe

By Tuan C. Nguyen November 5 at 9:25 AM

Step inside the newest coffeehouse on Dlnick street in Prague and it doesnt take long to notice that somethings amiss. Theres no cash register, nor a counter where customers would typically form a line.

Instead, youll find a long, wood slab table situated ever so slightly towards the left side of the room, where a wide selection of pastries, along with menus, plates, cups, utensils, jugs of water and an expresso machine can be found neatly laid out in the open.

Oddly enough, theres something about the arrangement thats refreshing, and at the same time, a bit disconcerting. Upon passing through the first time, my initial reaction was to quickly scan the room for any apron-wearing employee. And as the confusion intensified, so did the urge to grab a cup and, heck, whip up a latte myself.

Just as I began mulling over that very notion, a gentlemen with a tightly-trimmed beard and who looked to be in his 20s, got up from a nearby table, where he had been seated with a couple of young women, and walked over to greet me.

I know the set-up can be sort of disorientating, but thats the whole point, Michal Navrtil, operations manager and part-time barista, assured me. The idea is that by not having uniforms, we also get rid of the imposed separation between patrons and workers.

Paraleln Polis, which in Czech means Parallel World, is known mostly for being perhaps theworlds first bitcoin-only cafe. (Heres my photo essay of what its like to buy coffee in the shop.) All transactions from wages to point of sale are processed virtually, using one of the most well-recognized cryptocurrencies. More broadly though, the recently-renovated space, which includes a co-working room and hacker space, was conceived as way to demonstrate on a micro level how an entirely decentralized society might function.

Even within the management team, there are no hierarchies, saida spokesman for the cafe who goes by the pseudonym Petr lka. Everyone who works here is considered a partner in the organization.

To understand whats going on here is to peer into the collective mind of Ztohoven, the rabble-rousing band of artists and hackers that run the joint. Known for their elaborate, guerrilla-style pranks, the anonymous group made headlines back in 2007, when six of its members hacked a live news broadcast signal and inserted a computer-generated atomic mushroom cloud that projected onto viewers TV screens. Prosecuted for scaremongering, they characterized the stunt as nothing more than a statement about the medias capacity to brainwash the public. Criminal charges was subsequently dropped.

Since then, almost allinvolved have come clean with their true identities and are now channeling their penchant for subverting authority toward educating the public about what they perceive to be the encroaching tyranny of centralized institutions.

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Innovations: The liberating idea behind Pragues bitcoin-only cafe

10/30 2014 Clayton Comets 18 @ West Johnston Wildcats 40 Junior Varsity Football game – Video


10/30 2014 Clayton Comets 18 @ West Johnston Wildcats 40 Junior Varsity Football game
The Clayton Comets JV team falls to 6-4 for the season with one more game to go against Southeast Raleigh. Tyquan Thorne #23 Devin Carter #10 score touchdo...

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10/30 2014 Clayton Comets 18 @ West Johnston Wildcats 40 Junior Varsity Football game - Video

Solo Of The Week: 46 Bill Haley and His Comets – Rock Around the Clock – Video


Solo Of The Week: 46 Bill Haley and His Comets - Rock Around the Clock
One of the first "shred" solos played on Electric Guitar, here #39;s from 1954 the guitar solo from Rock Around the Clock by Bill Haley and His Comets Solo Cover and Tabs by David Escobar. Subscribe...

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Solo Of The Week: 46 Bill Haley and His Comets - Rock Around the Clock - Video

Comets advance with 61-19 win over Meadow Lake

In what was the final home game for the Melfort Comets football team they had a great performance in all facets of the game in their 61-19 over the Meadow Lake Carpenter Spartans on Saturday, November 1 at MUCC Field in the SHSAA 9-Man Football 3A quarter-finals. Leading the way was the offense which got going after a slow start in the first quarter. I think it was one of our best offensive performances of the year. The offense came out and executed very well from the first possession to the last possession when we gave it over to the juniors. I think we punted twice, Comets coach Dave Rogers. The game turned on a defensive stand mid way through the first quarter which gave the Comets the football on downs. It was pretty even up in the first quarter, we got a turnover and made a play and the defense put a stand together and we started rolling from there, Rogers said. Rogers noted that Comets were strong in all three phases of the game, with mistakes on special teams being the only flaw. We got a little bit of work to do in special teams, we let a big kickoff return, we have to clean up a couple of things on special teams. We had a punt partially blocked, he said. The Comets defense, which has been a strong suit all season, allowed the offense to put up their performance. Little things didnt turn into big things because our defense played well. We need to secure those things and clean them up, Rogers explained. After going two and out on their first three drives the Comets got on the board to make the game 7-0 on a touchdown by Jomar Malaggay. Soon after the Spartans tied it on touchdown by Ryley Pethick. Running back Tyler Jones picked up three touchdowns with his first giving the Comets a 14-7 lead in the second quarter. Jones, a Grade 11 running back, wanted to win the game for the graduating Comets players. Its the Grade 12s last home game so we wanted to make it good for them. We had a good week of preparation and it all showed on the field today, Jones said. Along with Jones, Brandon Kadachuk had three touchdowns in the second half and Lee Taylor also picked up a touchdown. That was our offenses best complete game that we have played all year, Jones said. Getting the win in the final home game was important for building momentum into the next round. It was huge you just want to show your fans what you can do going on the road for provincial semis and hopefully the provincial final. It was a big game and we came out on top, The Comets added their final points when Logan Ferland kicked a field goal with under two minutes remaining. Ferland was perfect on extra points and field goals on the day. A safety rounded out theComets scoring. Brandyn Martin was the defensive player of the game with key plays throughout the game. The Comets travel to Delisle on Saturday, November 8 after Delisle defeated Broadview 31-9 on Saturday in the other SHSAA 9-Man Football 3A quarter-final. They are a familiar foe for the Comets. This will be the fourth year in a row that we play Delisle, Rogers said. michael.oleksyn@sunmedia.ca @melfortjournal

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Comets advance with 61-19 win over Meadow Lake

Comets strike first, advance to state quarters

KINGSTON For Crestwood, nothing is more important than that first goal.

The Comets thrive off it and until they get it, their opponents face unrelenting offensive pressure until that ball finds the back of the cage.

It took a little longer than usual on Tuesday night, but with 17 seconds left in the first half, Crestwood got that goal en route to a 3-1 win over Boiling Springs in the opening round of the PIAA Class 3A Field Hockey Championship at Nesbitt Stadium.

It was so important, said sophomore Jordan Olenginski about scoring first. The last 30 seconds were so exciting. Just going into the second half knowing we had a one-oh lead. Just a little reassurance goal knowing we had to play more defense in the second half.

Crestwood will face Selinsgrove, 3-2 OT winners over Twin Valley, in the quarterfinals on Saturday at a site and time to be determined.

From the very start of the game, Crestwood took control of the game. They dominated ball possession and gave Boiling Springs players little relief in those rare moments when they actually won the ball. But the feisty Bubblers clogged passing lanes and prevented Crestwood from cashing in.

That was until Olenginski took advantage of an assist from Madisyn Granoski and put the Comets on the board 1-0 heading into halftime.

I think they know that they can score and if they keep knocking it will happen, Crestwood head coach Pat Moratori said. So they tend not to get frustrated. I think that will help us in the long run. They know they have to work and its not going to come easy and its not going to be simple.

From there, it was business as usual for the Comets. Hannah Ackers knocked in a rocket of a shot (assisted by Casey Cole) which echoed throughout the stadium when it hit the back of the cage to put Crestwood up 2-0.

Olenginskis second goal of the night, assisted by Cole, put the game out of reach at 3-0. Boiling Springs eventually got on the board on a goal by Elyse Brockman, assisted by Emma Spisak, with 16:20 to go.

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Comets strike first, advance to state quarters

John Negrin Recalled from Kalamazoo

November 4, 2014 - American Hockey League (AHL) Utica Comets Utica Comets Director of Hockey Operations Pat Conacher announced today that the Comets have recalled defensemen John Negrin from Utica's ECHL affiliate, the Kalamazoo Wings. Defenseman Kane Lafranchise has also been loaned to the Wings.

Negrin, 25, began the season with Utica but did not appear in a game before being assigned to Kalamazoo on Oct. 17. Negrin has posted three assists in five ECHL games this season. The 6'2", 202-pound defenseman spent the 2013-14 season with the Comets but was limited to just 16 games while he battled a series of injuries. He didn't make his season debut until Feb. 15 but he appeared in 14 of the team's final 22 contests. He finished with one assist and 10 penalty minutes.

Prior to joining the Comets, Negrin split the 2012-13 season with the AHL's Chicago Wolves and Lake Erie Monsters as well as the Kalamazoo Wing. Between his two AHL stops, Negrin registered five points in 18 games (2-3-5) while he collected another nine points (two goals, seven assists) in 44 ECHL contests.

Lafranchise, 26, played in just one game with the Comets and did not record any points. He has appeared in two games with the K-Wings and has two assists. He finished the 2013-14 season by winning a Kelly Cup Championship with the ECHL Alaska Aces. He split the regular season between the Aces and the Abbotsford Heat. With the Heat, the Edmonton-native collected 13 assists in 34 games and registered another six points (three goals, three assists) with the Aces. In the playoffs he tallied another 11 points (one goal, 10 assists) in 15 games.

The Comets host the Binghamton Senators on Wednesday at The AUD. Tickets are on sale at the Utica Memorial Auditorium box office and online through Ticketmaster. For more information, call 315-790-9070 or visit http://www.uticacomets.com.

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John Negrin Recalled from Kalamazoo

Senior boys Comets volleyball earn title

The MUCC Comets senior boys volleyball team claimed their second title in a row with a victory at the North Battleford John Paul II tournament from October 31 to November 1. Melfort placed first overall in round robin and earned a bye to the semi-finals. The Comets advanced to the final with a 25-17, 25-15 victory over Unity. In the championship game the but the Comets took the trophy with a 25-21, 25-22 victory over the host John Paul II. In round robin play on Friday the Comets defeated Wilkie 25-8, 25-20 and Unity 25-9, 25-22. Saturday the Comets completed pool play with a 25-10,25-11 victory over John Paul II, a 25-15, 25-12 win over Paradise Hill and a 22-25,26-4, 15-5 win over North Battleford Comprehensive. The Comets head to a warm up tournament in Prince Albert this weekend before the Regional 5A Championship in Prince Albert on November 15.

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Senior boys Comets volleyball earn title