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  • Ethics panel charges 20-term Democrat - A New York Democratic colleague of Rep. Charles Rangel told CNN on Thursday that Rangel and the House ethics committee are "close to a settlement" involving Rangel's alleged violations of House rules.
  • Engineering grad waits to become legal - Oscar Vazquez will likely read this story. He has the internet. He has a television, too. Then, he'll go off to work at a car parts factory. He buries himself in work in this small Mexican town to keep his mind off thoughts of his wife and young daughter back in the United States.
  • WikiLeaks may have blood on their hands - The top U.S. military officer said Thursday that Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, was risking lives to make a political point by publishing thousands of military reports from Afghanistan.
  • Racing team owner Roush transferred to Mayo Clinic - NASCAR team owner Jack Roush, who was injured in a plane crash Tuesday, was transferred from a Wisconsin hospital to the Mayo Clinic, in Rochester, Minnesota, according to a statement released Thursday by one of his companies.
  • Firefighters gain ground against blazes in Kern County, California - Hundreds of fire personnel appeared to be making progress against the wildfires ripping across Kern County, California. The southern California community was hit this week by two wildfires 60 miles apart: the Bull Fire, southeast of the town of Tehachapi, and the West Fire, north of Tehachapi in the Sequoia National Forest.
  • Health officials urge evacuations near Michigan oil spill - Officials in Michigan Thursday urged residents living near the Kalamazoo River oil spill to evacuate the area because of health concerns.
  • Obama shares highs, lows on The View - President Barack Obama was "charming as usual" during a taping of a segment with "The View" set to air Thursday, said Joy Behar, one of the co-hosts.
  • Senator: 6,600 Arlington graves may have been mismanaged - A senate subcommittee hearing is scheduled Thursday to examine the mismanagement of Arlington Cemetery, one of the nation's most hallowed burial places for its war dead.
  • Feds, parish presidents devising Gulf recovery plan - The man overseeing the federal response to the Gulf oil disaster will meet New Orleans parish presidents Thursday to outline the plans after the well is permanently sealed.
  • Teams mourn amid reports of basketball player's death - Former colleagues of missing ex-NBA player Lorenzen Wright expressed condolences Thursday after police found a man's body in Memphis, Tennessee.


  • FOX NEWS

  • Cloud Over Rangel as Ethics Panel Remains Mum on Deal - House ethics panel hits longtime N.Y. congressman with 13 ethics violations, then begins meeting on his fate — offering little indication of whether a plea deal is at hand or if Rangel is headed for a rare public trial.
  • Jury of Rangel's Peers Meet
  • YOU DECIDE: Should Rangel Be Given Deal?
  • Read the Allegations Against Rangel (pdf)

  • Top Mexican Drug Lord Killed in Military Clash - One of the top three leaders of Mexico's most powerful drug cartel, Ignacio 'Nacho' Coronel, is killed in gunbattle in a major victory for President Calderon
  • U.S. Consulate on Border Closes for Security Review

  • Mullen: WikiLeaks May Have 'Blood on Hands' - Chairman of the Joint Chiefs calls release of classified war records deeply damaging and potentially life-threatening for U.S. soldiers and Afghan informants
  • Report: GI Tied to Leaked Data
  • EXCLUSIVE: Network Aids AWOL Afghans to Canada

  • End Citizenship for Children of Illegals? - After a key portion of Arizona's immigration law was blocked, lawmakers kick around proposal to bar U.S.-born kids of illegals from becoming citizens
  • Arizona Appeals Ruling
  • |
  • Poll: Gov't Not Enforcing Law

  • Are Some Soaps Damaging Sex Organs? - A nonprofit environmental group has sued the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, claiming the agency failed to regulate toxic chemicals found in "antimicrobial" soap and other personal care products.


  • Drivers Defeating Big Brother's Speed Cameras -


  • Oil's Stopped, How to Clean Up the Mess?- Noah's Ark -


  • Foreclosures Up in 75% of Top Metro Areas -


  • Texas Mayor Shot Daughter From Behind -


  • Prisoner Escapes After Posing as Other Inmate -


  • Fox News Poll: GOP 11-Point Lead in Midterms- FULL COVERAGE: 96 Days to Decide -


  • Sting Shows Holes in Passport Security -


  • Gruesome Charges Against 'Nazi' Revealed -


  • Israel Rejects Claims of Holy Land Health Risks -


  • Has Obama's 'Race to the Top' Lost Its Shine?- CLICK HERE FOR TAXPAYER CALCULATOR -




  • TOP STORIES

  • Rangel Case Poses Test for Democrats as Elections Near - New York Times -

    msnbc.com

    Rangel Case Poses Test for Democrats as Elections Near
    New York Times
    WASHINGTON — In laying out 13 charges of ethical violations committed by Representative Charles B. Rangel, the House ethics committee set the stage for a rare public trial of the Democratic Congressman this fall, ...
    Republicans Say Rangel Passed on Chances to Settle Ethics CaseBusinessWeek
    Democrat Rangel charged with 13 ethics violationsWashington Post
    Panel Hits Rangel With 13 Ethics ChargesABC News
    USA Today -Christian Science Monitor -Wall Street Journal
    all 3,853 news articles »
  • Arizona sheriff launches 17th immigration sweep - Los Angeles Times -

    Telegraph.co.uk

    Arizona sheriff launches 17th immigration sweep
    Los Angeles Times
    Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio says he timed it for the day SB 1070 takes effect to send a message: that nothing is changing despite a court ruling on the law. In Los Angeles, protesters chain themselves together with plastic pipes and handcuffs, ...
    'I can get my family back': immigrants driven out of Arizona return homeIndependent
    Obama's Immigration Victory in Arizona Adds Pressure for Federal ActionBloomberg
    Protests assail Arizona's immigrant law; sheriff vows to enforceSeattle Times
    Fort Worth Star Telegram -Washington Post -Washington Times
    all 6,932 news articles »
  • Thousands of more classified documents missing: Gates - The Hindu -

    Reuters

    Thousands of more classified documents missing: Gates
    The Hindu
    PTI "It could be a substantial additional number of documents. And we have no idea what their content is, either," The US Defense Secretary said. Days after the WikiLeaks went onto release more than 92000 classified documents pertaining to the war ...
    Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen: WikiLeaks release endangers troops, AfghansWashington Post
    Gates Assails WikiLeaks Over Release of ReportsNew York Times
    Pentagon Partners with FBI to Investigate Leaked Military DocumentsVoice of America
    Hindustan Times -The Associated Press -CBC.ca
    all 1,804 news articles »
  • Enviros want $5B from BP for coastal restoration - BusinessWeek -

    Reuters

    Enviros want $5B from BP for coastal restoration
    BusinessWeek
    Environmentalists are calling on the White House to speed up the restoration of the oil-damaged Mississippi River delta by getting BP PLC to pay $5 billion now for environmental damage caused by its April 20 spill. And US Rep. ...
    Oil lobbyists spill into halls in DCHouston Chronicle
    Day 100: The Latest on the Oil SpillNew York Times
    A final fix to gulf oil leak may be at handLos Angeles Times
    USA Today -The Associated Press -The Guardian
    all 4,090 news articles »
  • NC expert: Gulf oil unlikely to reach East Coast - The Associated Press -

    NC expert: Gulf oil unlikely to reach East Coast
    The Associated Press
    RALEIGH, NC — An expert on marine sciences and coastal circulation says it's unlikely oil from BP's massive spill in the Gulf of Mexico will reach the East Coast. Roy He of North Carolina State University said Thursday the chances are low in part ...

    and more »
  • A 'View' to a shill - Boston Herald -

    msnbc.com

    A 'View' to a shill
    Boston Herald
    That was the lone surprise of Barack Obama's dubious history-making appearance yesterday on ABC's “The View,” as he became the first sitting president to appear on a daytime talk show. Resident conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck, ...
    Katie Couric's Notebook: Obama on "The View"CBS News
    Obama on 'The View': How did he do?Christian Science Monitor
    War, jobs ... and SnookiTampabay.com
    The Associated Press -The Epoch Times -Toronto Sun
    all 825 news articles »
  • LA officials tour fire zones, urge residents to prepare - Los Angeles Times -

    LA officials tour fire zones, urge residents to prepare
    Los Angeles Times
    As three brush fires ignite in northern LA County and two continue to burn in Kern County, LA's mayor and fire chief give the sprawling city a once-over. By Ann M. Simmons, Los Angeles Times Hoping to avoid a repeat of last year's disastrous Station ...
    LA mayor urges brush clearance to stop firesSan Jose Mercury News
    1500 homes under evacuation orders in LA CountyThe Associated Press
    Officials concerned about danger due to dry brush in fire-prone areasContra Costa Times
    UPI.com -LAFD News & Information (blog) -KTLA
    all 323 news articles »
  • GOP Rep.: Bill to aid 9/11 responders will fail - BusinessWeek -

    Washington Post

    GOP Rep.: Bill to aid 9/11 responders will fail
    BusinessWeek
    A bill that would pay billions of dollars to people exposed to toxic dust from the World Trade Center will fall short in a House vote, one of its key supporters said Wednesday. The House is expected Thursday to take up a measure to ...
    Congress rejects Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act as GOP members balk ...New York Daily News
    Plan to Aid 9/11 Victims Is Rejected in HouseNew York Times
    House Lawmakers Vote Down Reopening Sept 11 Compensation FundWall Street Journal
    The Associated Press -NY1 -DNAinfo
    all 443 news articles »
  • Thousands of Arlington graves may have been mishandled - Los Angeles Times -

    Boston Globe

    Thousands of Arlington graves may have been mishandled
    Los Angeles Times
    A Senate report shows that 4900 to 6600 graves among the 330000 at the national cemetery for veterans and others may be unmarked, improperly marked or mislabeled on cemetery maps. The former superintendent of Arlington National Cemetery says he accepts ...
    Hostile senators unload on ex-Arlington chiefsSalon
    Mislabeled Graves May Number 6600New York Times
    Arlington cemetery's lapses stun senatorsKansas City Star
    The Guardian -CNN -AFP
    all 882 news articles »
  • Military plane that crashed was practicing for Alaska air show - CNN International -

    The Hindu

    Military plane that crashed was practicing for Alaska air show
    CNN International
    (CNN) -- All four airmen on board an Air Force C-17 were killed when the cargo plane crashed during a training mission near Elmendorf Air Force Base in Alaska on Wednesday, the Air Force reported Thursday. ...
    Fatal C-17 crash also damaged Alaska Railroad tracksAnchorage Daily News
    Air show to go on despite deadly crashThe Associated Press
    Four killed in Air Force plane crash in AlaskaReuters
    FOXNews -New York Times -Daily Mail - Charleston
    all 1,306 news articles »


  • NEWS

  • iPhone iOS 4 Complaints Could Be Apple's 'Vistagate' - Just when you thought it was safe to turn on your iPhone ... Antennagate may be over, but complaints are now rolling in from iPhone 3G users who downloaded the latest Apple mobile operating system.

    There are reports that upgrading the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS to iOS 4 causes the phone to drag and the battery to run out more quickly. Apple has said it is investigating the issue, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.

    "My I-phone 3G was running perfectly fine, till I updated to OS 4, it's been slower than the slowest, and even turns itself off at anytime, during browsing and even during calls. I updated to 4.0.1 only to improve things a little bit. Still the problems persist," wrote a user from India who calls himself I-Phone 4.0.1 bugs. "Am cursing myself why I updated it."

    Worldwide Complaints

    The problem isn't confined to Asia. Users in the United States are reporting the same issues. Some say the iPhone 3GS now "stutters." Others say the iPod capabilities on the phone are "completely busted." Still others report the updated iPhones won't go to the home screen and take 30 seconds to respond to various commands.

    One forum complainer named "Savvytraveller" said his apps are crashing or just freezing after the upgrade to iOS 4.0.1. This same users reports the handset is getting hot. The complaints go on and on, giving Apple another headache after the iPhone 4 case giveaway just eased the last one.

    Indeed, this isn't what Apple expected when it touted iOS 4, the newest version of the iPhone mobile operating system with the much-anticipated multitasking. Many iPhone 3GS users upgraded to tap into the multitasking capabilities, which promise to let users switch between apps while preserving battery life.

    iOS 4 also offers a new Folders capability that...

  • Mobile Apps Leak Personal Info on Android, Apple Phones - Mobile apps on Android-powered smartphones and Apple's iPhone can disclose more personal data than most users realize, security vendor Lookout revealed Wednesday at the Black Hat USA 2010 conference in Las Vegas. Rather than being malicious, users often give the apps permission to access data when they are installed.

    Lookout CEO John Hering and CTO Kevin Mahaffey told a session titled App Attack: Surviving the Mobile Application Explosion that a popular Android wallpaper app from Jackeey Wallpaper sent users' data, including phone numbers and SIM card numbers, to a server in Shenzhen, China. The wallpapers included My Little Pony and Star Wars.

    Free apps can be risky, they said, with about 29 percent of free Android apps and 33 percent of those for the iPhone able to determine a user's location. Apple's iOS does, however, require apps to alert users when location information is accessed. iPhone users can also use the settings to block apps from accessing personal data.

    In addition, Hering and Mahaffey said, about eight percent of Android apps and 14 percent of iPhone apps can access user contacts. And 47 percent of Android apps and 23 percent of iPhone apps have third-party code, usually for mobile ads and analytics, but sometimes for other purposes.

    They urged app developers to be aware of security practices, especially when third-party code is added. Mahaffey noted, "The lesson today is that developers don't always know what's inside their apps."

    Hering added, "Standardized APIs are making it easier and easier to actually create practical attacks. Instead of having to do something complex in a desktop-like environment, I know I can just call the contact API, for example, and have a very simple programmatic way to grab that information."

  • HP Confirms Plans for Both Windows and webOS Tablets - Hewlett-Packard has confirmed it plans separate tablet computers running Microsoft's Windows and Palm's webOS. HP says it will use Windows for a business device and webOS for a consumer-oriented machine.

    No release dates, product specs, or prices have been named, but HP spokesperson Marlene Somsak told us in an e-mail that a Slate-type computer is coming soon.

    Slated For Fall

    "We aren't saying anything beyond 'fall' for a Windows-based slate," she wrote. "And we have not set an official name or set pricing. We are aiming that product at the commercial market. webOS from Palm is the platform for our consumer slate -- no timing, name or pricing revealed there."

    Somsak declined further comment.

    Speculation abounded last week about the technology giant's tablet plans when the HP Slate made a brief appearance on the company's web site, listed as the Slate 500-1002TU, with no release date or price. First unveiled by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January, the Slate was assumed to be dead when HP purchased the failing Palm, creator of webOS.

    The Slate 500-1002TU was described in product specs as a fun device for social media, photos and videos, which means it's not likely the upcoming HP Windows device geared toward enterprises. It had an 8.9-inch screen, video and still cameras, a gigabyte of memory, a 1.6-gigahertz processor, and support for input from an electronic pen "to write or draw as if on a piece of paper," HP said.

    That device disappeared from the web site after it prompted numerous articles in the technology media.

    A Two-Pronged Approach

    Taking advantage of Microsoft's strong desire to be in the burgeoning tablet market -- Ballmer on July 12 said it is "one of the most important things we'll do in the smart-device category" -- while also promoting webOS for tablets...

  • Motorola Smartphone Sales Up Despite Mobile Loss - Motorola said it shipped 8.3 million cellular handsets in the second quarter -- including 2.7 million smartphones, or 400,000 more units than the company shipped in the prior quarter. Overall, the company said it earned $162 million -- up from $26 million in the same period last year.

    However, Motorola said its mobile-device shipments declined from 8.5 million in the first quarter and mobile-device sales were $1.7 billion, down six percent year over year. Additionally, the company reported an operating loss of $109 million for its mobile-device business.

    As a possible sign of better days to come, Motorola co-CEO Sanjay Jha noted that demand for the company's Droid X has been "exceeding our expectations" since its launch earlier this month. "I believe we have momentum going into the third and fourth quarter," Jha said. "As we continue to execute on our business strategy, we are in a strong position to continue improving our share in the rapidly growing smartphone market and improving our operating performance."

    Betting On Android

    According to Gartner, Motorola ranked sixth in the global smartphone market with a three percent share at the end of this year's first quarter, right behind Sony Ericsson at 3.1 percent. Moving forward, Motorola hopes to benefit from the rising popularity of the Android mobile operating system, which grew a stunning 707 percent year-on-year during the first quarter in the North American market, where Motorola recorded 66 percent of its mobile-device sales.

    Motorola is also hoping to capitalize on the headline-grabbing antenna flaw sowing doubt about Apple's iPhone 4. A new IDC survey indicates that 66 percent of current iPhone owners have decided to put off their purchase of Apple's new smartphone.

    Apple is attempting to address the flaw by offering a free case that promises to mitigate connectivity problems even as it contends that rival...

  • Amazon Offers New $189 Kindle, with a $139 Model Coming - In a move to compete with Apple's iPad and emerging e-reader alternatives, Amazon.com on Wednesday unveiled the next-generation Kindle. The new-look Kindle comes equipped with a new electronic-ink screen that offers better contrast in a 21 percent smaller body that holds fast to its six-inch reading area. The new Kindle is also 15 percent lighter than its predecessor.

    The made-over Kindle promises to turn pages 20 percent faster, offers up to one month of battery life, pulls content in Wi-Fi and free 3G, and doubles storage to accommodate 3,500 books. The price is $189. If you don't need the 3G capability, a Wi-Fi-only Kindle is expected Aug. 27 for $139.

    At a $139 price point, some analysts are seeing commoditization of the Kindle. But Avi Greengart, an analyst at Current Analysis, disagrees: "I'm not calling it a commoditization because it's not a commodity. This is tied very closely to Amazon's bookstore, so it defies commoditization. This is getting into impulse-buy territory."

    Just Buy the E-Books

    Along with the new Kindle, Amazon is making sure the e-book-buying world knows that Kindle e-books can be read on other devices, including the iPod touch, iPhone, Mac, PC and Android-based devices. The bookseller also pointed to its Whispersync technology that keeps track of where a reader left off reading an e-book on one device so it picks up in the same place when the reader resumes reading on another device.

    "The Kindle is a delivery mechanism for Amazon. Amazon is perfectly happy if you buy Kindle books and read them on the iPad or the PC," Greengart said. "But if you want a dedicated e-book reader, they are going to provide you with several different models at extremely aggressive prices so that you join the Amazon family rather than the Barnes & Noble family, the Sony family, or the...

  • U.S. Orders for Dell Streak Overflow Even Without a Price - Though the Dell Streak took its inaugural bows on Telefonica's O2 network in the United Kingdom early last month, U.S. consumers are still waiting to get their hands on the hybrid tablet-smartphone. Despite a large volume of pre-orders on the company's web site, Dell has yet to announce pricing or provide a firm U.S. launch date.

    The reason for the delay is that the Streak is the most successful pre-sale device that the computer maker has ever offered, according to Dell blogger Lionel Menchaca. "There are many pieces that need to fall into place to release a product like this, and the reality is that we need more time to work out some things," Menchaca wrote Monday.

    Definitely a Need

    Once Dell launches the device in the United States, the main question will be to what extent it impacts Apple's iPad sales, given that the Streak will offer similar features but be small enough to carry just about anywhere. IDC Research Manager Francisco Jeronimo expects to see the iPad and the Dell Streak successful in two different market segments.

    The iPad will be the choice for people with "a clear preference for a bigger screen" who primarily wish to use their devices at home, Jeronimo said. However, another segment of users will be attracted to a smaller go-anywhere device that sports a screen large enough to view web pages in their natural form -- something they are unable to do on a smartphone.

    "For these users, the Dell Streak will be a much more attractive proposition," Jeronimo said. "There's definitely a need on the market for a mobile device that falls midway between a netbook and a smartphone."

    Unlike the iPad, the Streak will be able to place and receive calls as well as offer support for Adobe Flash 10.1 multimedia...

  • Safari 5.0.1 Released with Extensions Gallery, Bug Fixes - On the heels of an iMac refresh, Apple on Wednesday released the next version of its web browser. As promised, Safari 5.0.1 comes complete with extensions and a Safari Extensions Gallery. In June, Apple rolled out extensions support to help developers create extensions using HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript. The result is a growing gallery currently at 100 extensions.

    The gallery lets Apple fans find extensions that add new features to the browser, such as toolbars that display live web feeds and sophisticated programs that filter web content. Safari 5.0.1 users can download and install extensions from the gallery or directly from a developer's web site.

    "The Safari Extensions Gallery puts Safari right up there with Chrome or Firefox with its ability to add functionality to the browser," said Michael Gartenberg, a partner at Altimeter Group. "It looks like they've got a good collection of extensions already up in the gallery. What's interesting is that once again there is a Bing extension built in. Other than the extensions, this is a minor release."

    Microsoft, Amazon and Twitter Agree ...

    Apple is getting kudos from some of its heavy-hitting technology colleagues (and competitors), including Microsoft, Twitter and Amazon.com. Gianna Puerini, vice president of worldwide design and community at Amazon, pointed to how the browser helps its customers build wish lists.

    "With Safari 5, we were able to quickly build the Add to Amazon Wish List extension that lets customers add items from any web site to their Amazon wish list with the click of a button," Puerini said.

    Jeff Henshaw, general manager of Microsoft's Bing User Experience, said the software giant is excited about working closely with Apple to bring "visually compelling Bing experiences to Safari."

    "The Bing Extension for Safari brings Bing search intelligence to everyday browsing with Safari," Henshaw said. "When a user selects text in Safari,...

  • What Your Smartphone App Doesn't Say: It's Watching - Your smart phone applications are watching you -- much more closely than you might like.

    Lookout Inc., a mobile-phone security firm, scanned nearly 300,000 free applications for Apple Inc.'s iPhone and phones built around Google Inc.'s Android software. It found that many of them secretly pull sensitive data off users' phones and ship them off to third parties without notification.

    That's a major concern that has been bubbling up in privacy and security circles.

    The data can include full details about users' contacts, their pictures, text messages and Internet and search histories. The third parties can include advertisers and companies that analyze data on users.

    The information is used by companies to target ads and learn more about their users. The danger, though, is that the data become vulnerable to hacking and use in identity theft if the third party isn't careful about securing the information.

    Lookout reported its findings this week in conjunction with the Black Hat computer security conference in Las Vegas.

    Lookout found that nearly a quarter of the iPhone apps and almost half the Android apps contained software code that contained those capabilities.

    The code had been written by the third parties and inserted into the applications by the developers, usually for a specific purpose, such as allowing the applications to run ads. But the code winds up forcing the application to collect more data on users than even the developers may realize, Lookout executives said.

    "We found that not only users, but developers as well, don't know what's happening in their apps, even in their own apps, which is fascinating," said John Hering, CEO of the San Francisco-based Lookout.

    Part of the problem is smart phones don't alert users to all the different types of data the applications running on them are collecting. IPhones only alert users when applications want to use their locations.

    And...

  • Amazon-Facebook Deal Could Lead To Social Shopping - The leading e-commerce site and the leading social network just shook hands on a tie-up that could lead to social shopping. Amazon.com launched a new beta feature Tuesday that lets shoppers connect their Amazon and Facebook accounts. The feature serves up gift recommendations for users and their friends based on the information stored in Facebook profiles.

    Privacy advocates haven't launched any missives yet, but Amazon was nonetheless quick to stress that it will not share any user account information or purchase history with Facebook. Amazon also promised not to try to contact anyone's friends on the social network.

    Intro To Social Shopping?

    When you connect Amazon and Facebook, the Internet book-selling giant said it will improve your shopping experience via an Amazon Facebook page. Amazon offers three reasons why shoppers should make the Amazon-Facebook connection.

    First, the company said it helps shoppers discover recommendations for movies, music and other products. Second, you can see upcoming birthdays of your friends and buy them a gift they'll enjoy because you can see their Amazon wish lists. Finally, you can explore your friends' profiles to see who has similar interests.

    Greg Sterling, principal analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence, said the Amazon-Facebook deal could significantly improve product recommendations that Amazon offers, as well as increase frequency and engagement with the site.

    "Ultimately it could help Amazon incrementally sell more stuff to people," Sterling said. "This was not an explicit part of the deal, but I also wonder whether Amazon will become a product data provider to any 'social shopping' initiative that Facebook might consider doing. I'm not sure, but it's interesting."

    Will Facebook Be Regulated?

    Amazon didn't go so far as to integrate the "Like" button on its product detail pages. Taking that step would have opened the door for Facebook to collect information about a customer's book, music and other...

  • WikiLeaks: Source of Leaked Data Is Unknown - WikiLeaks' editor-in-chief claims his organization doesn't know who sent it some 91,000 secret U.S. military documents, telling journalists that the Web site was set up to hide the source of its data from those who receive it.

    Julian Assange didn't say whether he meant he had no idea who leaked the documents or whether his organization simply could not be sure. But he did say the added layer of secrecy helps protect the site's sources from spy agencies and hostile corporations.

    "We never know the source of the leak," he told journalists gathered at London's Frontline Club late Tuesday. "Our whole system is designed such that we don't have to keep that secret."

    U.S. officials said U.S. operatives inside Afghanistan and Pakistan may be in danger following the massive online disclosure Sunday.

    In his first public comments, President Barack Obama said the leak of classified information from the battlefield "could potentially jeopardize individuals or operations." He spoke in Washington after meeting Tuesday with Congressional leaders from both parties on the topic.

    U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said a Pentagon investigation will determine whether criminal charges will be filed in the leaking of Afghanistan war secrets. Holder, speaking during a visit Wednesday to Egypt, said the Justice Department is working with the Pentagon-led investigation to determine the source of the leak.

    In Baghdad, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters he was "appalled" by the leak.

    "There is a real potential threat there to put American lives at risk," he said.

    While Assange acknowledged that the site's anonymous submissions raised concerns about the authenticity of its material, he said WikiLeaks had yet to be fooled by a bogus document.

    "We do see wholly fabricated submissions, usually around election time," he said, but added that they were "quite rare."

    Assange added that WikiLeaks used ex-military and...

  • Cyber Mastermind Arrested in Slovenia - A cyber mastermind from Slovenia who is suspected of creating a malicious software code that infected 12 million computers worldwide and orchestrating other huge cyberscams was arrested and questioned, police said Wednesday.

    Leon Keder, a spokesman for the Slovenian police, did not identify the suspect. Keder told The Associated Press the man was released after police made sure that he could not tamper with evidence or leave Slovenia, but offered no details pending an investigation.

    The FBI told The AP in Washington that a 23-year old Slovene known as Iserdo was picked up in Maribor in northwestern Slovenia 10 days ago, after lengthy investigation by Slovenian police, FBI and Spanish authorities.

    His arrest comes about five months after Spanish police broke up the massive cyberscam, arresting three of the alleged ringleaders who operated the Mariposa botnet, which stole credit cards and online banking credentials. The botnet -- a network of infected computers -- appeared in December 2008 and infected hundreds of companies and at least 40 major banks.

    Botnets are networks of PCs that have been infected by a virus, remotely hijacked from their owners, often without their owners' knowledge, and put into the control of criminals.

    The Mariposa botnet, which has been dismantled, was easily one of the world's biggest. It spread to more than 190 countries, according to the researchers who helped take it down after examining it in the spring of 2009.

    Jeffrey Troy, the FBI's deputy assistant director for the cyber division, said Iserdo's arrest was a major break in the investigation.

    On Wednesday, the FBI also identified, for the first time, the three individuals arrested in connection with the case in Spain: Florencio Carro Ruiz, known as "Netkairo;" Jonathan Pazos Rivera, known as "Jonyloleante;" and Juan Jose Bellido Rios, known as "Ostiator.

    They are being prosecuted for computer crimes. Officials said the Mariposa...

  • Sprint Nextel Posts First Subscriber Gain in Three Years - Sprint Nextel Corp. said Wednesday that it gained subscribers in its latest quarter, the first such gain in three years, as it continued to improve customer service and retention.

    However, it continued to lose the most lucrative customers, those who sign two-year contracts, and posted a wider loss for its second quarter due to tax effects.

    Sprint shares rose 6 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $4.90 in morning trading. In pre-market trading, shares were up as much as 10 percent before investors fully digested the numbers.

    Sprint gained a net 111,000 subscribers in the April to June period, compared to a loss of 257,000 in the same quarter last year. It said it expects to keep adding wireless subscribers for the rest of the year, and reduce the number of contract customers who leave.

    Sprint still lost 55,000 subscribers under its own brands -- which include Virgin Mobile and Boost -- in the latest quarter, but made up for that by adding 166,000 wholesale and affiliate subscribers, who buy access to the network through resellers.

    It lost 228,000 contract subscribers, a figure much improved from the 991,000 it lost in the same quarter last year.

    Sprint has been hemorrhaging subscribers nearly constantly since its 2005 acquisition of Nextel. That network, incompatible with Sprint's, is valued for its walkie-talkie-like push-to-talk function, but is poorly suited to smart phones, and more than a million subscribers have been leaving every year.

    The rate of contract subscribers canceling service every month was 1.85 percent in the quarter. That was Sprint's lowest figure ever, though it's still higher than the corresponding figure at AT&T and Verizon Wireless.

    Sprint CEO Dan Hesse said the company had some help from the launch of its first "4G" phone, the HTC EVO, which can tap into Clearwire Corp.'s wireless broadband network for faster downloads in some areas....

  • With Today's Social Media, Is True Friendship Dying? - To anyone paying attention these days, it's clear that social media -- whether Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or any of the countless other modern-day water coolers -- are changing the way we live.

    Indeed, we might feel as if we are suddenly awash in friends. Yet right before our eyes, we're also changing the way we conduct relationships. Face-to-face chatting is giving way to texting and messaging; people even prefer these electronic exchanges to, for instance, simply talking on a phone. Smaller circles of friends are being partially eclipsed by Facebook acquaintances routinely numbered in the hundreds. Amid these smaller trends, growing research suggests we could be entering a period of crisis for the entire concept of friendship. Where is all this leading modern-day society? Perhaps to a dark place, one where electronic stimuli slowly replace the joys of human contact.

    Awareness of a possible problem took off just as the online world was emerging. Sociologist Robert Putnam published the book Bowling Alone, a survey of the depleting levels of "social capital" in communities, from churches to bowling allies. The pattern has been replicated elsewhere in the Western world. In the United Kingdom, the Mental Health Foundation just published The Lonely Society, which notes that about half of Brits believe they're living in, well, a lonelier society. One in three would like to live closer to their families, though social trends are forcing them to live farther apart.

    Typically, the pressures of urban life are blamed: In London, another poll had two-fifths of respondents reporting that they face a prevailing drift away from their closest friends. Witness crowded bars and restaurants after work: We have plenty of acquaintances, though perhaps few individuals we can turn to and share deep intimacies. American sociologists have tracked related trends on a broader scale, well beyond the urban...