Facebook’s Picks Sweden For First Data Center Outside U.S. | PCMag.com

Facebook has tapped a Swedish town about 62 miles south of the Arctic Circle to be the home of its first data center outside of the U.S. Located in the northern town of Lulea, Facebook said the server site will improve performance for European users.

“Facebook has more users outside the U.S. than inside,” Facebook’s director of site operations Tom Furlong told the Associated Press. “It was time for us to expand in Europe.”

Facebook currently has servers in California, Virginia, and Oregon and is building another complex in North Carolina. The company chose Lulea for its first European site because of its chilly climate, necessary for keeping servers cool. In the winter the temperature stays far below freezing and in the summer, it rarely climbs above about 80 degrees.

Lulea was also selected for its proximity to sources of renewable energy. The town is near a river with hydropower stations that generate double the electricity yielded by the Hoover Dam, Facebook told the AP. Powering the servers will require 120 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 16,000 homes, according to the Telegraph.

The new site can run entirely on renewable energy, but Facebook has plans to build 14 backup diesel generators capable of producing 40 megawatts of electricity in case of a blackout, the AP said.

via Facebook’s Picks Sweden For First Data Center Outside U.S. | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

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Facebook could face €100,000 fine for holding data that users have deleted | The Guardian

Facebook could face a fine of up to €100,000 (£87,000) after an Austrian law student discovered the social networking site held 1,200 pages of personal data about him, much of which he had deleted.

Max Schrems, 24, decided to ask Facebook for a copy of his data in June after attending a lecture by a Facebook executive while on an exchange programme at Santa Clara University in California.

Schrems was shocked when he eventually received a CD from California containing messages and information he says he had deleted from his profile in the three years since he joined the site.

After receiving the data, Schrems decided to log a list of 22 separate complaints with the Irish data protection commissioner, which next week is to carry out its first audit of Facebook. He wrote to Ireland after discovering that European users are administered by the Irish Facebook subsidiary. A spokeswoman for the commissioner confirmed its officers would be investigating alleged breaches raised by Schrems as part of the audit. If the commissioner decides to prosecute and Facebook or any employees are found guilty of data protection breaches, the maximum penalty is a fine of €100,000.

Among the 1,200 pages of data Schrems was sent were rejected friend requests, incidences where he “defriended” someone, as well as a log of all Facebook chats he had ever had. There was also a list of photos he had detagged of himself, the names of everyone he had ever “poked”, which events he had attended, which he hadn’t replied to, and much more besides.

The information was broken down into 57 categories, including likes, log-ons (a list of when he logged on and which IP address he used) and emails, which included some email addresses Schrems had never personally uploaded to the site but which he assumes were discerned from another user’s profile.

via Facebook could face €100,000 fine for holding data that users have deleted | Technology | The Guardian.

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Hiding from eDiscovery in Plain Site « eDiscovery101

QR or “quick response” Codes have been showing up a lot more in the last year. A QR code is a matrix barcode (or two-dimensional code), readable by QR scanners, also readable by mobile phones with a camera, tablet computers with built-in camera including iPads, and smartphones including iPhones. The code consists of black modules arranged in a square pattern on white background. The information encoded can be a text message, a SMS message, a URL, an email reply or several other types of data. The QR code in the top left corner of this blog is the QR code for the URL for the eDiscovery101.net blog site.

QR codes are increasingly gaining acceptance in United States business and end user mind share, though they have been popular in some Asian countries for many years.

So what do QR codes have to do with eDiscovery? A friend of mine was telling me about a new business he had started using QR codes in a very unique way and it occurred to me to wonder if eDiscovery collection and review applications would be able to recognize data encoded into QR codes and if not, how could custodians use QR codes to pass information they didn’t want to be found in an eDiscovery process. For example, could you email information to others without calling attention to yourself by using encryption or have the content indexed and flagged by eDiscovery applications?

The answer is absolutely…

Look at the following email example:

via Hiding from eDiscovery in Plain Site « eDiscovery101.

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Hackers Impersonate Google to Snoop on Users in Iran – NYTimes.com

Hackers passed themselves off as the Internet giant Google with the apparent goal of snooping on people using Google services in Iran, the company said.

It was the latest in a string of breaches that call into question the reliability of certificates that are supposed to verify the authenticity of Web sites. Such breaches make dissidents and human rights workers particularly vulnerable because they can allow repressive regimes, or supporters of those regimes, to spy on their online activities.

In this case, the attackers hacked into the site of a Dutch company, one of many that have the authority to issue the digital certificates, and obtained one that they used to impersonate Google. When users in Iran went to a Google site, including Gmail and Google Docs, they could be intercepted by the impostors in what is known as a man-in-the-middle attack.

via Hackers Impersonate Google to Snoop on Users in Iran – NYTimes.com.

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Facebook Pays $40G To Hackers In New ‘Bug Bounty’ Scheme | FoxNews.com

Since launching its “bug bounty” program three weeks ago, Facebook has forked out $40,000 to hackers who detected security flaws on the social networking site.

About fifty people who have successfully identified problems have been acknowledged on Facebook’s “whitehat” — geek-speak for a hacker who is a good guy — site, and to date, Facebook has paid one individual $7,000 for flagging six issues and $5,000 for a particularly bad flaw, the Financial Times reported Wednesday.

“We realize … that there are many talented and well-intentioned security experts around the world who don’t work for Facebook,” Facebook’s chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, wrote on the company’s blog Monday.

“We established this bug bounty program in an effort to recognize and reward these individuals for their good work and encourage others to join,” he added.

Facebook said that while it had received time-wasting alerts from people “looking for publicity,” the program was a success.

via Facebook Pays $40G To Hackers In New ‘Bug Bounty’ Scheme | FoxNews.com.

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Half of America Is Using Social Networks – NYTimes.com

Social networks have crossed another milestone.

For the first time, half of all adults in the United States said they used a social networking site, according to a survey released on Friday by the Pew Research Center.

That is 50 percent of all Americans, not just those who say they are online. Six years ago, when Pew first conducted a similar survey, only 5 percent of all adults said they used social sites, like Facebook, LinkedIn or MySpace.

It is a sign of how deeply and widely social networking companies have penetrated the lives of ordinary people and, in turn, transformed the ways in which people communicate, authorities govern and companies sell things.

Parents use Facebook to vet nannies, carmakers to introduce new models, police to keep tabs on suspects. Federal government authorities are preparing this weekend to use social networking sites for hurricane preparation on the East Coast.

The Pew survey found that among adults who are online, the rates of participation were higher: 65 percent, according to the survey, up slightly from 61 percent last year.

Not surprising, the sites are more popular among younger people: 83 percent of people surveyed in the 18-29 age bracket said they used social networking sites, compared with 51 percent of those in the 50-64 bracket. The young are also twice as likely to use social sites every day.

via Half of America Is Using Social Networks – NYTimes.com.

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Google beefing up its +1 button | Digital Media – CNET News

Google is enhancing its familiar Google +1 button to give people more control over the content they share and who they share it with.

Found on many a Web site these days, the +1 button lets people signed in to their Google account share and recommend specific content with their friends and contacts that can then appear as recommended pages in Google’s search results. But the button has been limited in that users have only been able to share links publicly and couldn’t comment on what their were sharing.

Now Google has tweaked the +1 button, says a blog posted yesterday, giving Google+ users the option to share a page with their circles and offer an opinion on what they’re sharing.

via Google beefing up its +1 button | Digital Media – CNET News.

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Is Microsoft launching a social network? – Computerworld

The social networking world may be getting even more interesting.

Microsoft may have accidentally leaked an image of its own social networking platform. Called “Tulalip,” the site is designed to enable users to “find what you need and share what you know easier than ever,” according to the image of its home page.

Judging from the one page, users would be able to sign in to the site using their Facebook or Twitter accounts.

According to the Fusible.com website, the image was discovered at the Microsoft-owned domain socl.com. The site, Fusible reported, was not operational when it was found this week.

As of Friday morning, the page had been removed from the site and replaced with this message: “Thanks for stopping by. Socl.com is an internal design project from a team in Microsoft Research which was mistakenly published to the web. We didn’t mean to, honest.”

via Is Microsoft launching a social network? – Computerworld.

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Groupon changes privacy policy to collect, share more personal info – chicagotribune.com

Groupon is changing its privacy policies to allow it to collect more information as it offers more deals targeted to users based on their locations.

The Chicago-based deal site announced the changes in an email to its 83 million subscribers Sunday, saying that the new policies are part of an effort to provide greater transparency about the way it handles private information about users. The announcements come as the company seeks to go public and on the heels of its launch of Groupon Now, a mobile service that provides instant deals based on a user’s location.

“In short, if you use a Groupon mobile app and you allow sharing through your device, Groupon may collect geo-location information from the device and use it for marketing deals to you,” the company said.

The company broadened its definition of “personal information” to include “interests and habits” and said a partnership that provides travel deals with Expedia means that personal information can be shared with the travel site if users subscribe to receive travel deals.

Groupon said other information it collects and shares with Expedia and for use on Groupon Now could include relationship information, transaction information, financial account information and mobile location information.

via Groupon changes privacy policy to collect, share more personal info – chicagotribune.com.

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Apple fires second legal salvo at HTC | Wireless – CNET News

Apple is doubling down on its legal assault against HTC.

Citing the U.S. International Trade Commission Web site, the Foss Patents blog reported today that Apple has filed a second complaint against HTC. The details are not yet available.

Apple wasn’t immediately available to comment or provide details on the patents that are in dispute with the second complaint.

HTC expressed its disappointment with the further legal entanglement.

HTC is dismayed that Apple has resorted to competition in the courts rather than the market place,” said Grace Lei, generation council for the company. “HTC continues to vehemently deny all of Apple’s past and present claims against it and will continue to protect and defend its own intellectual property as it has already done this year.”

via Apple fires second legal salvo at HTC | Wireless – CNET News.

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