poisoning
The year 2009 saw high-profile attacks against social-networking sites -- and we ain't seen nothing yet. Security researchers and social-networking gurus expect more attacks -- and more sophisticated attacks, no less -- on popular social-networking sites in the year ahead.
The impetus for malicious hackers begins with the sheer numbers. Facebook now boasts more than 350 million users. MySpace, Twitter, LinkedIn, Ning, Friendster, Badoo and the scores of other growing social networks online mean plenty of opportunity for cybercriminals.
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- Freenewsfeed
- Source
- bit.ly
- Facebook Inc
- Google Inc.
- McAfee Labs
- poisoning
- rogue services
- search-engine poisoning
- share rogue applications
- similar services
- social networks
- social-networking buzz
- social-networking populations
- social-networking sites
- tinyurl.com
- trusted mainstream web site
- Twitter Inc
by Shiban Ganju
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- Alaska
- Alaska,United States
- Arabian ocean
- dengue
- diarrhea
- food shortage
- food storage
- Glacier Bay
- http://www.alaskaclimatechange.org
- http://www.climatechange.alaska.gov
- India
- Kenai Peninsula
- Kivalina
- Kivalina,Alaska,United States
- law object
- Lucknow
- malaria
- Newtok
- Newtok,Alaska,United States
- North America
- poet
- poisoning
- prickly heat
- Shishmaref
- Shishmaref,Alaska,United States
- starvation
- United States Army
- World Health Organization
When people who’ve lived in Boston talk to each other, their
reminiscences are often wildly variable, depending on when they lived
there. A mentor of mine lived in Somerville in the 1980’s, and has a
memory of this city I can’t believe. It sounds like paradise. This is
because I lived there during the Big Dig, the federal highway project
which temporarily re-routed, demolished, then restored, several miles
of superhighway through the city. The Dig affected every aspect of the
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- Ad Hamilton
- America
- AmeriCorps Youth Leadership Training Center
- architect
- architect and urban planner
- architect and urban planner , the author
- asthma
- author
- Boston
- Boston Department of Public Works Sidewalk
- Charlotte
- Chrysler
- Chrysler building
- Daimler AG
- Dan O'Brien
- dementia
- depression
- energy
- Erin
- golf
- Google Inc.
- Hitler
- Landscape Architecture Department
- Massachusetts Avenue
- officer
- owlsmag(AT)gmail(DOT)com
- Parris Island
- Peter Kline
- poisoning
- professor
- Sean Hill
- Senior Center
- Senior Living Facility
- Somerville
- Spain
- Stacey Swann
- steel
- thoughtful landscape architect
- uranium mining
- Verizon
- Verizon Communications Inc.
- vomiting
- Wireless BlackBerry
One of the more expensive parts of a standard fuel cell is its platinum catalyst. Platinum is a metal that is good at splitting up the oxygen (O2) molecule into two oxygen ions (O+) at the cell’s cathode. Platinum is also pretty expensive. In a fuel cell for a typical passenger car, the platinum catalyst can cost about $4,000.
One of the more expensive parts of a standard fuel cell is its platinum catalyst. Platinum is a metal that is good at splitting up the oxygen (O2) molecule into two oxygen ions (O+) at the cell’s cathode. Platinum is also pretty expensive. In a fuel cell for a typical passenger car, the platinum catalyst can cost about $4,000.
One of the more expensive parts of a standard fuel cell is its platinum catalyst. Platinum is a metal that is good at splitting up the oxygen (O2) molecule into two oxygen ions (O+) at the cell’s cathode. Platinum is also pretty expensive. In a fuel cell for a typical passenger car, the platinum catalyst can cost about $4,000.
One of the more expensive parts of a standard fuel cell is its platinum catalyst. Platinum is a metal that is good at splitting up the oxygen (O2) molecule into two oxygen ions (O+) at the cell’s cathode. Platinum is also pretty expensive. In a fuel cell for a typical passenger car, the platinum catalyst can cost about $4,000.
A man-made strain of the common bacteria E.coli has been created by researchers at the University of California in Los Angeles that could lead to a new generation of biofuels. Researchers report in the current issue of the Journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that they've synthesized bacteria that can produce fuel-worthy alcohols.