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MSN starts Green Channel
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MSN Goes Green.

MSN Goes GreenToday MSN added a new channel to its online information and entertainment network called MSN Green — a one-stop online resource for the latest environmental news, exploring the issues and taking action.

MSN has teamed up with some of the leading media and environmental sources, MSNBC, Hearst Magazines (The Daily Green), Conservation International, Environmental Defense, Grist.org, TreeHugger.com and StopGlobalWarming.org, to offer the new channel, located at http://green.msn.com.

MSN Green, the online network’s newest channel, targets eco-conscious Web audiences with informative “green” articles and pictures, videos and other content.

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Leopard OS hits 2 million sales
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Apple's Leopard OS hits 2 million sales.

Leopard OS hits 2 million salesApple® today announced that it had sold over two million copies of the new Mac OS® X "Leopard" since its release on Friday, this far outpaced the first-weekend sales of Mac OS X Tiger, which was previously the most successful OS release in Apple’s history.

“Early indications are that Leopard will be a huge hit with customers,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “Leopard’s innovative features are getting great reviews and making more people than ever think about switching to the Mac.”

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CAPTCHA Stripper
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Mellisa the CAPTCHA stripper.

Mellisa the CAPTCHA stripperTrend Micro beleive that spammers have created a revealing Windows game which shows a woman in various states of undress when people correctly identify the text shown in an accompanying CAPTCHA image.

CAPTCHA, short for Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart, was started when bots started spreading over the Internet a few years ago. The CAPTCHA system was aimed at preventing automated submissions/registrations of bots by prompting the user to validate himself as a human, usually requiring the user to input a sequence of alphanumeric characters contained in an image supposedly “unreadable” by a machine.

If you correctly input the letters, and press “go”, “Melissa” the stripper reveals more of herself and another CAPTCHA picture for you to identify.

The “answers” however are sent to a remote server, where someone eagerly awaits them to circumvent a Captcha system to gain e-mail accounts or membership to forums to post spam links.

So the strip-tease game is actually a ploy by ingenious malware authors to identify and match ambiguous CAPTCHA images from legitimate sites, using the unsuspecting user as the decoder of the CAPTCHA image.

 
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