The researchers also note that there are a number of potential applications for EyePassword's approach to visual input that have nothing to do with security.
They don't say how long will it take for the software to be installed free of charge and without the user's acknowledgement. To steal passwords at worst and to be used by advertisers at best. A necessary evil. But there are innocent applications, indeed, like integration with Flash and other interactive stuff, and this is also interesting, despite everything. I'd even say it's a great way to popularize the technology to use it later with the malicious intent.
Sir Clive Sinclair had confirmed the rumours about Sinclair QL switching to 80386. "With the fuse technology old programs compiled for the Z80 CPU run just as good. In fact, I've been playing Exolon on a fuse machine since morning."
Eew.
Isn't there anycast already, which solves exactly this problem, and which Google already uses for its own public DNS service?
So how do you know if that was an AV malfunction or something had really infected your explore.exe?
"Here's one good reason the OpenBSD project will NEVER consider using stock subversion. While subversion's license is BSDish, Subversion depends on the Apache portable runtime, which has the same unacceptable license as Apache 2." -- from this post at undeadly.org.
And of course the 12 reasons you'll love Safari are all aimed at developers, right? This is how you describe an "SDK" for a mobile phone, right?
"Mac OS X has been living a secret double life for the past 5 years." Who knows what happens inside Microsoft.
Sir Clive Sinclair had confirmed the rumours about Sinclair QL switching to 80386. "With the fuse technology old programs compiled for the Z80 CPU run just as good. In fact, I've been playing Exolon on a fuse machine since morning." Eew.