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Green Tech, Web

Al Gore Pushing for .eco Domain Name



Since leaving public office and embarking on a quest to raise the public's awareness of climate change, Al Gore has been a part of an Oscar-winning documentary and received a Nobel Peace Prize. According to Mashable, the former Vice President is now embarking on a campaign with the Sierra Club, Surfrider, and other eco-organizations to make the Net a greener, more environmentally friendly entity.

The Dot Eco organization is appealing to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers to add ".eco" to the short list of "top-level domains (TLDs)" (in layman's terms, the end of a Web address, like ".com" or ".gov"). Fifty-percent of the proceeds from those domain fees would be donated to various environmental causes to increase "funding for research, education, and action," according to director Davis Guggenheim.

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Cell Phones, Celebrities, Green Tech, Mobile Software, Mobile Phones

"Wireless a Key Tool to Solving Climate Crisis," Says Al Gore


Nobel Peace Prize winner and 45th Vice President of the United States Al Gore graced the mobile phone and wireless industry today with his presence at the 2009 CTIA Wireless convention in Las Vegas. As the final day's keynote speaker, Gore presented an abbreviated version of a modified 'Inconvenient Truth'-style spiel mashed-up with insert-wireless-comment-here-type generalities.

The highlights included some hilariously dry deliveries of self-deprecating jokes about his life immediately after leaving office, a subtle reminder that he invented the Internet (..."in January of 1993, there were only 50 Web sites, now there are billions..."), a long boring historical section that loosely linked the printing press and Marconi's radio with the wireless industry, and, finally, at the end, a summation and reiteration of just how the vital role that wireless technologies will play in helping save the planet, both economically and environmentally. (Some of the featured examples of wireless econo/enviro-wonders: Reduced health care costs and less paper waste thanks to electronic medical records and wireless health monitoring, high-capacity broadband networks like WiMax reaching rural parts of the world, and wireless monitoring and management of energy use.)

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Computers

Happy 20th Birthday, Interwebz!

Al Gore may not agree, but this week marks the anniversary of the birth of the Web. 20 years ago, on March 13, 1989, Tim Berners-Lee, a researcher for the European Organization for Nuclear Research lab outside of Geneva, Switzerland, proposed an idea to counter data-loss at CERN due to personnel turnover and incompatible computers. In the proposal, Berners-Lee described the predicament by stating, "When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost... The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found."

To combat the information dilemma, Berners-Lee drafted his manifesto "Information Management: A Proposal." In his script, Berners-Lee suggested that we "should work toward a universal linked information system," and that "the aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterward." Using remarkable foresight, Berners-Lee's proposal would take a few years to take shape, as pioneers such as Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen of Netscape paved the way for casual surfing.

So even though Al Gore may have said "I took the initiative in creating the Internet," give Berners-Lee his due credit this weekend as you search for random videos of people doing ridiculous things. Oh, how proud he must be of how far his baby has come. [From: Cnet News]

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Computers, Celebrities

Celebrities Fighting Back Against Fake Twitter Profiles


Twitter, while fun and useful, has become a breeding ground for hacks who dream of becoming the next Fake Steve Jobs. Lance Armstrong, Britney Spears, and Al Gore have all recently joined the microblogging service and have had to reclaim their online identities.

Last month, Britney launched a new blog style site and snatched up therealbritney on Twitter. Now, Al Gore has been forced to act on his promise to join Twitter (he said he would in an interview several months ago) in order to thwart the attempts of TheRealAlGore to capitalize on his celebrity. Rumors were circulating that TheRealAlGore was in fact the real Al Gore, and the fake account racked up a couple of thousand followers very quickly. The real life Al Gore (confused yet?) acted quickly and launched his own account al_gore and confirmed its authenticity. TheRealAlGore lost a vast majority of his followers, and al_gore had amassed over 6,000 within a few days.

Lance Armstrong recently had to address a similar issue. Instead of simply drowning out the impostor who owned the lancearmstrong username on Twitter, Armstrong managed to gain control of the account, though whether it was through negotiation with the faker or through brute force on the part of Twitter administrators is not known.

It's good to see more high profile members of society joining and taking advantage of Twitter. We're waiting for the fake Biggie profile to force the Notorious B.I.G. to reveal he's still alive and well. [From: VatorNews and Mashable]

Computers, Celebrities

Rush Limbaugh Goes Left and Right for Tech Support

Rush LimbaughConservative or liberal, Republican or Democrat, we all know the frustration of computer bugs and unanswered pleas for tech support. Case in point: conservative radio talk personality Rush Limbaugh made a public plea to Apple CEO (and Democrat) Steve Jobs on his broadcast last week for help with a problem he's encountered with his collection of networked, high-end Mac Pro computers.

"El Rushbo" (as his Web site calls him) relies almost exclusively on his e-mail application for all communication and even word processing. The problem is that the Mac Leopard operating system, which has an automatic file backup system called Time Machine, doesn't seem to want to back up his e-mail. Limbaugh has had his own Mac rep work on the problem and also called Mac tech support, all to no avail, with even a Mac tech support staffer saying they have the same problem with their machine.

Limbaugh broadcast this plea: "Mr. Jobs, please help me. I know we don't agree on anything. You love Al Gore -- and by the way, I've got no problem with him now, but can you put me to somebody that can get this going, because I know it's gotta work for most people. What am I doing wrong?"

Could his plea to Steve Jobs fall on deaf or maybe just unsympathetic ears? Limbaugh's producer jokingly suggests the Macs don't do what Limbaugh needs because of the political divide.

Still, Limbaugh is looking for help. He notes he's not alone with this dilemma and that "there's a whole thread at the Apple site of people having the same problem."

Limbaugh has been a long-time Mac supporter and has stated his computer preference on his show many times over the years. So, maybe it's not true that Macintosh lovers are all liberal after all?

Limbaugh is still waiting for a solution. He posted an update to the situation on his Web site, noting that some in the Mac community are offering suggestions for work arounds to the problem.

In the meantime, maybe we should all be satisfied the computer bugs and system gremlins don't discriminate based on status or political leanings. In front of a computer, we're all equal -- and equally frustrated.

From Vallywag.


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Computers

Al Gore's Blog Hacked



Al Gore's blog -- in which the former presidential candidate-turned-celebrity environmentalist posts updates on global warming and the documentary 'An Inconvenient Truth' -- has been hacked. But it's likely you'd never know it by looking at the thing.

That's because most of the hack work is hidden. The hackers in this case gained access to the site through a security hole, then inserted hidden links into the blog posts. To see them, check out our gallery of screens below. Hidden in the source code of the site, we found link after link pointing to drugs like Xanax, Viagra, Tramadol, and just about any other drug you can think of. Not terribly riveting, we know, but we just wanted to offer you some proof.

So what's the point of hidden links that you can't see? The answer lies in the results you get on search engines like Google. By hijacking a very popular site like Al Gore's, the hackers can get their own pages more prominently placed in search results on Google. That's because these links can be seen by Google's crawler, which runs through the hidden code of Web pages to figure out where to direct you should you search for something like, say, Xanax. Since these links appear in a very prominent page, in this case Gore's blog, Google's engine thinks they are important, so people who later search for Xanax in Google might very well be redirected to the hacker's Web site over another.

Interestingly, the links point to another site that also seems to have been hacked, making this literal web of intrigue a bit thicker. Don't worry, it's nothing to fear on your end as far as security or viruses are concerened. It's also doubtful that the guilty party will ever be caught, but we're hoping that Al calls his system administrator in short order and gets those links removed. This kind of pollution, at least, is easily cleaned. Unfortunately, right now, some poor chump is probably buying Viagra from the company that employed these hackers to give them Google search prominence.



From PC World

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Computers, Celebrities, iPod

Jobs Wants Gore for Prez

For a politician who supposedly isn't running for the U.S. Presidency, Al Gore is certainly getting a lot of time in the spotlight. He most recently won over the hearts of Mac fanatics everywhere with a picture of his office seating in front of a sweet triple 30'' Cinema display setup.

He has also managed to win over the heart of the biggest Mac fanatic of them all: Apple's Steve Jobs. Jobs apparently has refrained from endorsing any of the current Presidential candidates because his pick, Gore, isn't in the running. Unfortunately for Jobs, it sounds like his attempts to change Gore's mind haven't worked. "We have dug ourselves into a 20-ft. hole," Jobs said, "and we need somebody who knows how to build a ladder. Al's the guy. Like many others, I have tried my best to convince him. So far, no luck."

From Valleywag

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