60,000 Credit Cards Numbers Stolen Online
robl writes "140,000 credit card numbers were tested for validity yielding about 62,000 valid credit card numbers and $300,000 of fraudulent charges. A good quote: "There wasn't a system in place to say, 'you've generated 140,000 charges, that's more than your normal volume.'" As Schneier-heads would say, it's a brittle system -- when the security fails, it fails badly."
"Or maybe they're just rolling our the new MSN - 'Microsoft' Version of the English language..."
.NET. It breaks compatibility with all currently existing spellcheckers, so you need to upgrade to Microsoft SpellChecker .NET, which only runs on Windows XP.
.NET. It streamlines the paragraph development cycle by eliminating the need to make verbs agree with their subjects and adjectives agree with the nouns they modify.
That's correct -- it's called Microsoft Visual English
For people that find English to be complicated, confusing, and outdated (Slashdot editors), Microsoft is also working on Visual English-Sharp
Very exciting stuff...