Nvidia releases the next Titan, the GTX Titan Black

Last year, Nvidia hoped to change the graphics card game when it released the GTX Titan, a high-performance, energy efficient card. Now, Nvidia has released an new model of the Titan, the GTX Titan Black.

Defending the Earth from asteroids with high-powered nuclear explosions

Just over a year ago, the Chelyabinsk meteor entered Earth’s atmosphere, streaked across the southern Urals, and detonated in a fireball that was briefly brighter than the sun.

Happiness is a warm iGun: Dumb gun requires smart watch to shoot.

Gun company Armatix hopes to take the smart device industry by storm with its new smart gun system.

Flappy Bird’s removal from the app store: A case for piracy

Flappy Bird’s developer, Dong Nguyen, has broken his radio silence to say that he pulled the game for the sake of your well-being.

Metal Gear Solid

Metal Gear Solid 5 runs at 1080p on PS4, limited to 720p on Xbox One. The PS3, Xbox 360, PS4, and Xbox One will all receive versions of this game, and it seems as if the difference between each console is incredibly stark.

Showing posts with label silk road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silk road. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Silk Road 2.0 ‘hacked’ for millions, community tearing itself apart.

 
Hackers like to play the cynical, world-weary intellectuals, but an awful lot of them still seem to go down with knives in their backs. More to the point, they often spend brief periods defending those who did the stabbing, refusing to be taken in by “government lies” about divisions in their precious community. The stubborn, almost sentimental refusal to quarantine friends is what felled many important members of Anonymous, and what brought down prominent international criminal organizations like Carders Market. The Deep Web provides a fog of war that can be exploited by anyone — by criminals to operate markets and discussion forums, by police to attack them, and by anyone at all to rob them blind.


Yesterday, one of the operators of the Silk Road posted a long and emotional comment to the dark market’s official forums which laid out the situation: “We have been hacked.” Somewhere between $2.4 and $2.7 million in Bitcoins has disappeared from the Silk Road’s custody thanks to — well, it depends who you believe. Earlier this month, the largest Bitcoin trader Mt. Gox made waves by refusing to continue direct Bitcoin withdrawals due to an alleged “bug” in Bitcoin’s fundamental design. The bug, called transactional malleability, could theoretically allow canny attackers to trick a wallet into thinking that a transaction has been denied, causing the wallet to resend the payment. Using this bug, someone was able to completely empty the Silk Road’s escrow account.