CO2 emissions, birth & death rates by country, simulated real-time Cryptome United Nations Crime and Justice Research Inst. - The Hackers Profiling Project (HPP) Hackers Profiling: Who Are the Attackers? Written by Raoul Chiesa (published in November 2010 in UNICRI Freedom from Fear Magazine) Who is attacking you? “We don’t know...” When talking about attackers and hacking it often happens that I ask people working at customer’s sites “who is scaring you?” These answers possibly mean that the company, feeling as a potential target, has not developed a proper IT Security Risk Analysis, while trying to figure out who may want to attack its IT infrastructure and gain access to its information. This mistake probably happens because every time people hear “hackers profiling,” the word “profiling” automatically makes them think about something that has already happened, rather than something that may happen. The hacking world has changed dramatically in the last thirty years, and the somehow “romantic” figure of the hacker of the ‘80s is far from today’s. It was the beginning of the second hacker’s generation, and the most known to the public too. Cracker
Henry Allingham Henry William Allingham (6 June 1896 – 18 July 2009) was a British supercentenarian, First World War veteran and, for one month, the verified oldest living man in the world. He is also the second-oldest military veteran ever and at the time of his death, he was the 12th-verified oldest man of all time. Allingham was the oldest ever surviving member of any of the British Armed Forces and one of the oldest surviving veterans of the First World War. Early life[edit] Allingham as an infant in the 1890s Allingham was born in 1896 in Clapton, County of London. First World War[edit] Allingham in RNAS uniform in 1916 Allingham wanted to join the war effort in August 1914 as a despatch rider, but his critically ill mother managed to persuade him to stay at home and look after her. After graduation, Allingham was posted to the RNAS Air Station at Great Yarmouth where he worked in aircraft maintenance. Sopwith Schneider Inter-war years[edit] Career[edit] Family life[edit] Second World War[edit]
Cidade Sustentável “Qual será o 11 de setembro da mudança climática? Um furacão atingindo Wall Street?” qua, 31/10/12 por Equipe Milênio | Veja a entrevista completa em Com a bolsa de Nova York fechada por dois dias por causa do furacão Sandy, dá até arrepio reler este trecho do livro de Paul Gilding. Desastres como este, diz Gilding baseando-se nas previsões dos meteorologistas, se tornarão cada vez mais freqüentes e levarão ao “Grande Acordar”. Gilding estava de passagem por Nova York, de férias com a família. Aproveitamos a entrevista com Gilding e essa locação para experimentar um novo formato no Milênio : gravar a conversa enquanto andamos por um lugar que tem a ver com o assunto, e acho que deu certo. E Times Square, mesmo num domingo de manhã, é um lugar barulhento e tumultuado. por Jorge Pontual Índia cria habitações sustentáveis resistentes a desastres naturais EcoD Arquitetos indianos criaram um conceito de habitação feito de bambu e resistente a desastres naturais. Sistema de Indicadores Nossa BH
Spiral Dynamics Integral (SDi) Oil Price rallies to more than $80, but will Oil and natural gas prices started the year with a rally today, mainly because of the weather and perhaps a bit of bullish sentiment lent by the falling dollar, the unresolved oil pricing dispute between Belarus and Russia and the positive manufacturing news from China. But will these levels stick around much of this year, as traders and some notable onlookers expect? February crude oil futures trading on New York’s Mercantile Exchange today were up more than $2, or 2.6 per cent, at more than $80 a barrel, while gasoline futures were up 2.59 per cent. The unresolved oil pricing issue between Belarus and Russia was also sighted as a reason for the increase even though Belarus’s state oil firm said that Russian oil was flowing normally to Europe regardless of Minsk and Moscow’s differences. Heating oil futures in New York were up more than 3 per cent as forecasters expected low temperatures to persist much of the week. But Iraq’s optimistic supply outlook may be short-lived.