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� The Blippy Leak: How Credit Card Numbers Got In Google
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April 24, 2010 Daily Technology News | |
Our Top Stories | The Blippy Leak: How Credit Card Numbers Got In Google A social shopping site called Blippy inadvertently got its users' credit card numbers indexed in Google. Here's how it happened. | Facebook's New Features and Your Privacy: What You Need To Know Facebook has introduced a bevy of new features that will impact your privacy. Here is what you need to know. | Facebook: 5 Privacy Settings You Must Tweak Now Keeping track of Facebook's updates can be confusing. Here's how to protect your privacy in the wake of recent changes. | Lost iPhone? Get Free Beer, Anyway Lufthansa is offering a free beer--and Business Class flight to Germany--to Gray Powell, the Apple engineer who lost the iPhone prototype in a bar. | YouTube Opens Rental Store The video site has quietly launched a streaming rental service, after some earlier experiments. | Nook Software Update: The Good, The Subpar The latest update to Barnes & Noble's Nook is packed with new features, but there are some things that could be improved even further. | Facebook's Plan to Rule the Web Analysis: Deconstructing Facebook's latest gutsy moves to infiltrate and influence your life. | 15-Inch MacBook Pro Unites Power with Economy The Core i5 and i7 models add speed to a well-built laptop design. | Silicon Valley Cops Investigate Lost 4G iPhone Charges may be pending in the case of the iPhone that was lost in a bar and then found on a blog. | iPad Buyer 'Banned for Life' from More Purchases Student who bought iPads for international customers who can't buy them yet says Apple cut him off. | Rumor: Cisco Wants to Come to the Tablet Party Could Cisco be working on a tablet aimed at business users? One Irish tipster seems to think so. | Rock Band Network Arrives on PlayStation After a month on the Xbox 360, Rock Band Network has unveiled five songs on Sony's console. | Is Avatar's Blu-ray Success Bad News for 3D TV? Since Avatar is a smashing success in Blu-ray 2D, does this mean that consumers are blasร© about 3D entertainment in the home? | Facebook to Get More Social, McAfee Crashes PCs The travel industry wasn't the only one affected by the volcano that erupted in Iceland. Mobile-phone vendors and suppliers adjusted shipping methods to get... | Despite Age, NASA's Hubble Telescope Is 'Cutting Edge' NASA officials say the agency's Hubble Space Telescope remains an 'enormous technical feat' 20 years after it was launched into orbit. | World Tech Update, Gates, iPads, and the Boston Marathon Bill Gates advocates for nuclear energy, iPads go on sale in Taiwan, and technology runs the Boston Marathon. | Google Attempts to Lure Mac Users to Chrome Googles promises that Chrome is a faster way to browse the Web than with Safari or Firefox. | Microsoft Yanks Back April Patch for Windows 2000 Microsoft retracts fix for Windows 2000 bug after finding 'quality issues,' but the company plans to reissue patch next week. | Study: Net Neutrality Rules Would Cost Telecom Jobs A study suggests net neutrality rules would cost broadband industry jobs. | | | Sponsored Downloads | DiskRescueSave $10! How degraded is your PCs performance? Unless checked, disk fragmentation is largely inevitable. Nonetheless, it is also slowly incremental, and, over time and if left unfixed, disk defragmentation will contribute to a significant loss of disk performance and an overall slowing of your PCs speed. | East-Tec DisposeSecureDon't give away sensitive information with the old computers that you or your company resells, donates or removes from operation. Deleting all files, formatting the hard disk or using FDISK is not enough to prevent people from restoring information using basic recovery programs. East-Tec DisposeSecure removes all traces of data from the computer hard disk by overwriting and destroying beyond recovery every sector and bit of information. | | |
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