Facebook Uses Scare Tactics to Get You to Improve ‘Account Protection’

Facebook Account Protect is Very Low

You may have already seen it: a warning in the upper right hand corner of the Facebook home page declaring that your account protection is low — or, even worse, very low! The warnings are a little overzealous, and don’t come with much of an explanation. It’s no wonder, then, that some folks have thought that it was part of some scam or a piece of Facebook scareware. But it’s actually Facebook’s way of getting you to beef up your account security… sort of. Clicking to increase your protection asks you to complete a couple of simple tasks that don’t necessarily make your account more secure, but will make it easier to regain access to your account should it be compromised. You’ll be asked to give an alternate e-mail address (should your primary e-mail account be hacked), to answer a “secret question,” and to confirm your mobile phone number — presumably for use with Facebook’s temporary password feature.

There’s nothing wrong with this, but Facebook never really makes clear why it needs this information from you. You’ll have to be comfortable adding your cell phone number and another e-mail address to the social network’s vast user database. Graham Cluley at the Sophos blog Naked Security points out that, if Facebook were really concerned with improving your security, the site would likely instruct you to: create hard-to-crack passwords, not answer secret questions honestly, and use different passwords for your Facebook and e-mail account (and different passwords on your primary and alternate e-mail accounts). There’s nothing wrong with offering options for recovering your account in case it gets hacked, but there is certainly a more honest way to approach the topic that doesn’t involve scare tactics.

Facebook Uses Scare Tactics to Get You to Improve ‘Account Protection’ originally appeared on Switched on Wed, 29 Dec 2010 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Netflix: ‘we’re going to continue our international expansion next year’

Three months after Netflix invaded Canada with a bizarre combination of paid actors and $8 instant streaming plans, CEO Reed Hastings the company has declared the move a success and says it will expand its service to other countries in 2011. “Based on the early success of Netflix.ca we’re going to continue our international expansion next year and we’re going to allocate significant dollars to it,” spokesman Steve Swasey told The Canadian Press, without specifying which territories or how many might be blanketed with Albanian soldiers next. However, Canadians and others hoping to get an experience completely on par with the original US service shouldn’t hold their breath, as Swasey says there are no plans to establish a movie queue for the streaming-only service, calling it a “strategic decision.”

Update: The above quotes were attributed to Netflix’s Steve Swasey, not CEO Reed Hastings. Our bad.

Netflix: ‘we’re going to continue our international expansion next year’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Dec 2010 15:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Switched, CNET  |  sourceThe Canadian Press (CBC News)  | Email this | Comments

Darryl Sutter steps down as Flames GM

Darryl Sutter stepped down as executive vice-president and general manager of Calgary Flames on Tuesday. He will be replaced by assistant GM Jay Feaster, who will take on the role of acting general manager. Sutter was named GM in April of 2003, just months after taking over as coach.

Blame Only Yourselves: ‘CityVille’ Now Even Bigger Than ‘FarmVille’

'cityville'You jerks. We told you not to do it, but you went and signed up anyway. In fact, it seems like you ignored us with great gusto, because Zynga’s new money-pit ‘CityVille’ has just surpassed the number of users of its old money-pit, ‘FarmVille.’ It took less than a month for this simulacrum of real life within a Precious Moments-themed casino of broken dreams to reach 16.8 million daily active users — 400,000 more than those still stuck hoeing blueberries.

Two other Zynga games — ‘FrontierVille’ and ‘Texas Hold’Em Poker’ — also appear in the top five Facebook apps, according to App Data. Only ‘Phrases,’ that weirdo app that U.S. users can’t even access, has managed to infiltrate Zynga’s evil gaming tetrad. You stay strong, ‘Phrases,’ and keep on doing whatever it is you do.

Blame Only Yourselves: ‘CityVille’ Now Even Bigger Than ‘FarmVille’ originally appeared on Switched on Tue, 28 Dec 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android Music Player 3.0 App for HoneyComb Leaked

The news is coming out that the official Android music player 3.0 app from Google has been leaked on XDA forum. The leaked music app is similar to the one which was demoed at Google I/O event this year however the leaked music player app is very buggy & doesn’t offer any of those features which Google demoed at I/O event, but it has got significant GUI overhaul.

It has been planned for Android 3.0 aka honeycomb release but if you don’t want to wait until Android 3.0 and wants to get your hands dirty with this music player app then head over to XDA forum & download android music player 3.0 APK file.

Android Music Player 3.0 App

Check out demo video of Leaked Android Music Player 3.0 application,

Download Android Music Player 3.0 App.

(Via Android Police & Engadget)

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Onkyo blesses 10.1-inch TA117 Android tablet with NVIDIA’s Tegra 250

Lookin’ to get a jump on the rest of the folks, eh Onkyo? Rather than waiting for CES to kick off next week, the aforementioned firm has just let loose its TA117, proving that it’s totally kosher with supporting both Microsoft and Google in the tablet wars. A duo of models will be made available — the TA117C3 and TA117C1 — with both of ’em getting a 10.1-inch touch panel (1024 x 600 resolution), Android 2.2, NVIDIA’s Tegra 250 (1GHz), 802.11b/g/n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, a microSD expansion slot, USB 2.0 connectivity (x2), HDMI out and a 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera. There’s also a docking port to use with an optional stand, and if you’re looking to spot the differences between the two models, the C1 is home to 512MB of DDR2 RAM alongside 8GB of integrated storage, while the C3 doubles up with 1GB of memory and 16GB of NAND. There’s nary a word on price nor release, but we hear Samsung’s Galaxy Tab is now feeling a bit small. If you know what we’re getting at.

Onkyo blesses 10.1-inch TA117 Android tablet with NVIDIA’s Tegra 250 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Dec 2010 12:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News  |  sourceOnkyo  | Email this | Comments

Samsung Vibrant and Fascinate get Froyo in Canada, hopefully with fewer bugs this time

A quick gander at Samsung’s Canadian support site for the Galaxy S line reveals that two Android 2.2 updates are currently available: one for the Vibrant — offered by Bell, Virgin Mobile, and SaskTel — and one for the Fascinate as sold be Telus. This all follows just a few days after Sammy had to pull the Vibrant’s Froyo update on word that it seemed be killing the internal microSD storage, so hopefully, this build will be just a little more drama-free. Oh, and Samsung had originally said that Telus Fascinate owners would be waiting until next year to upgrade their units, so it’s pretty neat that they were able to rein that in a bit and get it pushed at the tail end of ’10. So have fun, Canadians — you’ve beaten your friends with T-Mobile Vibrants and Verizon Fascinates to the punch on this one, and we encourage you to lord it over them at every opportunity.

[Thanks, Robert B.]

Samsung Vibrant and Fascinate get Froyo in Canada, hopefully with fewer bugs this time originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Dec 2010 03:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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