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Posts tagged with "Google"

The Digital Dead Sea Scrolls

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The Dead Sea Scrolls are now online; a project of The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, powered by Google technology.

http://dss.collections.imj.org.il/



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rYj_0foJYA





Google helps put Dead Sea Scrolls online
Both amateur and professional scholars will now have access to 1,200 megapixel images.

Mmm mmm good - YouTube videos now served in WebM

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search randomness

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EU Plans Fresh Strike on Microsoft

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By Emil Protalinski | Last updated May 29, 2009 4:09 PM CT

According to The Wall Street Journal, the EU is considering forcing Windows users to choose a browser to download and install before they can first browse the Internet.

The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) is reporting today that European Union antitrust regulators aren't done with Microsoft yet. The EU is looking into more sanctions against the software giant for including Internet Explorer with Windows, according to WSJ's sources, and will likely announce a final ruling in the next few weeks. An EU spokesperson said that if the regulator rules against Microsoft, any remedy "would be based on the fundamental principle of unbiased choice" while a Microsoft spokesman says the company is "committed" to "full compliance" with EU law.

Third-party browser makers like Opera, Mozilla and Google are pushing for tough sanctions against Microsoft. That may result in the software giant having to include rival browsers in Windows. Redmond's main argument is that users can always download a third-party browser, but the EU would rather have a "ballot screen" for users to choose which browsers to download and install as well as which one to set as default. The bundling requirement might end up becoming a responsibility for manufacturers.

With the release of the Windows 7 Release Candidate, Microsoft made it possible to remove IE8 (the beta did not allow this), along with many other Windows components, but this apparently was not enough for the EU.


http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2009/05/eu-may-force-windows-users-to-choose-a-browser.ars

Google joins the EU's Internet Explorer smackdown

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Google has applied to participate as a third party in the European Commission's effort to regulate the browser market and unbundle Internet Explorer from Microsoft's Windows operating system.

By Ryan Paul | Last updated February 24, 2009 5:35 PM CT


Google likes to tout the advantages of self-regulation and the free market when its dominance in search and advertising is called into question, but the Web giant doesn't seem to mind letting the government intervene in the browser market. In an announcement posted today at Google's official public policy blog, Google VP of product management Sundar Pichai says that the company will be participating as a third-party in the European Commission's (EC) ongoing investigation of Internet Explorer.


the rest is here:

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/02/google-joins-the-eus-internet-explorer-smackdown.ars

Chrome, Firefox get clickjacked

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Liam Tung, ZDNet.com.au

29 January 2009 04:20 PM


Security researchers have discovered a flaw affecting Google's Chrome browser which exposes it to clickjacking — where an attacker hijacks a browser's functions by substituting a legitimate link with one of the attacker's choice.


Google has acknowledged the flaw and is working towards a patch for Chrome versions 1.0.154.43 and earlier when running within Windows XP SP2 systems, according to SecNiche security researcher Aditya K Sood.

Sood disclosed the flaw on 27 January and has since posted a proof of concept on the Bugtraq vulnerability disclosure forum.

"Attackers can trick users into performing actions which the users never intended to do and there is no way of tracing such actions later, as the user was genuinely authenticated on the other page," Sood said within the disclosure.

While Google is working on a fix, a spokesperson for the Australian arm of the company pointed out that clickjacking affected all browsers, not just Chrome.

"The [clickjacking] issue is tied to the way the web and web pages were designed to work, and there is no simple fix for any particular browser. We are working with other stakeholders to come up with a standardised long-term mitigation approach," they said.

However, independent security researcher, CEO of Australian security consultancy Novologica, Nishad Herath, told ZDNet.com.au that after running Sood's proof of concept he found that Internet Explorer 8 (release candidate 1 and beta 2 versions) and Opera 9.63 (the latest version) were not exposed to the flaw. But, like Chrome, Firefox 3.0.5 was exposed.

Google's security researchers had not found any attacks in the wild which exploited the specific vulnerability, said Google's spokesperson.

Clickjacking is a relatively new browser attack which security researchers Robert Hansen and Jeremiah Grossman gave a talk on late last year at the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) security conference in New York. The attack broadly fits within the category of cross-site scripting forgery, where an attacker uses maliciously crafted HTML or JavaScript code to force a victim's web browser to send an HTTP request to a website of their choosing.

"Clickjacking means that any interaction you have with a website you're on, for example like clicking on a link, may not do what you expect it to do," explained Herath.

"You may click on a link that looks like it's pointing to a picture on Flickr, but in reality, it might first direct you to a drive-by-download server that serves malware. These types of attacks can be used to make you interact with web services you're already logged onto in ways that you would never want to, without you even knowing that it has happened."


http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Chrome-Firefox-get-clickjacked/0,130061733,339294633,00.htm




However, independent security researcher, CEO of Australian security consultancy Novologica, Nishad Herath, told ZDNet.com.au that after running Sood's proof of concept he found that Internet Explorer 8 (release candidate 1 and beta 2 versions) and Opera 9.63 (the latest version) were not exposed to the flaw. But, like Chrome, Firefox 3.0.5 was exposed.



Opera 9.63 is safe smile

Google Webmaster Tools warning about hackable sites

Message Center warnings for hackable sites

http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2008/10/message-center-warnings-for-hackable.html

Recently we've seen more websites get hacked because of various security holes. In order to help webmasters with this issue, we plan to run a test that will alert some webmasters if their content management system (CMS) or publishing platform looks like it might have a security hole or be hackable...

I guess they are putting that power to good use yes

Google is big

We knew the web was big...
7/25/2008 10:12:00 AM
We've known it for a long time: the web is big. The first Google index in 1998 already had 26 million pages, and by 2000 the Google index reached the one billion mark. Over the last eight years, we've seen a lot of big numbers about how much content is really out there. Recently, even our search engineers stopped in awe about just how big the web is these days -- when our systems that process links on the web to find new content hit a milestone: 1 trillion (as in 1,000,000,000,000) unique URLs on the web at once!

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/we-knew-web-was-big.html
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