Hackers attack popular Facebook, Twitter sites

Representatives from both Facebook and Twitter have confirmed today that attackers executed successful Denial of Service attacks against their respective web sites causing downtime and confused users during the event.  Twitter was down for a couple of hours.  Both web sites claim to have completely restored functionality for all social networking fanatics the world over.

A Denial of Service (or Dos) attack occurs when single computer endpoints (like a web site) are flooded with network requests at the same time, slowing the response time for legitimate users down to a crawl.    A DoS attack can also be distributed, which means a collection of compromised computer systems simultaneously (but separately) send requests to an endpoint, quickly bringing almost any network to its knees.

News reports have not indicated any motive from the attackers.  In fact, they haven’t identified the attackers at all up until this point.  My money is on a group of computer nerds who dislike the idea of social networking sites and wanted some attention.  DoS attacks aren’t used to steal information or cause malicious harm to the targeted network.  It’s more of a nuisance attack than anything – even though DoS attacks can, under the right circumstances, result in financial losses as networks and services become unavailable during the attack.

During the attack, Twitter posted this message on their web site:

“On this otherwise happy Thursday morning, Twitter is the target of a denial of service attack,” wrote Twitter co-founder Biz Stone. “Attacks such as this are malicious efforts orchestrated to disrupt and make unavailable services such as online banks, credit card payment gateways, and in this case, Twitter for intended customers or users. We are defending against this attack now and will continue to update our status blog as we continue to defend and later investigate.”

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Web site publishes hacked Twitter documents

According to TechCrunch, a popular technology information center, they were sent more than 300 sensitive documents that were “easily” obtained by a hacker.  The documents contain everything from financial predictions to meeting minutes and even pass codes that can be used for Twitter office buildings.

Twitter

Twitter

TechCrunch said they won’t publish more sensitive information like pass codes, but they have published Twitter’s financial forecasts, which indicate their first profit in Q3 of this year, $400,000.  According to the documents, Twitter expects more than 25 million users by the end of 2009 and a whopping $140,000,000 in revenue by the end of 2010.

TechCrunch says they’ll provide more information into what the product is that Twitter expects will net their first quarterly profit.

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PHP 5.3.0 has been released to public

PHP 5.3.0 is out of “Release Candidate” stage and is now the latest stable version of by far the easiest programming language available for web use, PHP.  Run over to the PHP.net web site and pick out the update to take advantage of some of its new features, like namespaces and garbage collection.

PHP Logo

PHP Logo

From the PHP web site:

The key features of PHP 5.3.0 include:

This release also drops several extensions and unifies the usage of internal APIs. Users should be aware of the following known backwards compatibility breaks:

For users upgrading from PHP 5.2 there is a migration guide available here, detailing the changes between those releases and PHP 5.3.0.

For a full list of changes in PHP 5.3.0, see the ChangeLog.

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Google wants share of operating system market

Now I’m convinced – Google truly does want to take over the world.  It’s only a matter of time before the search engine giant starts manufacturing smart weapons for the military.  In their latest iteration of computing dominance, they are putting together an operating system, called Google Chrome OS, that essentially works entirely online.

One of many Google logos

One of many Google logos

“Operating systems that browsers run on were designed in an era where there was no web,” wrote Google in their official announcement of Chrome OS.  “Speed, simplicity and security are the key aspects of Google Chrome OS. We’re designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds.”

Instead of the operating system controlling your computing environment like they do now, Chrome OS will act purely as a means to connect to the Internet, and your network access will provide the majority of the computing power and resources that you’ll need to interact with software products.  For example, forget Microsoft Office and instead use Google Docs, which is a web-based word processing and spreadsheet application available through Google’s servers.

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Is Internet Explorer 8 a decent product?

I’m a web developer by trade.  I spend my days in front of a computer screen typing away code that makes web applications work.  One of the biggest gripes web developers have about this business is compatibility between browsers.  Each browser manufacturer each has their own interpretation of HTML, CSS, Javascript and other technologies that go into making this page — and every page — work.  When browsers don’t interpret things the same way, you find sites that break in some browsers but not in others.

Internet Explorer Logo

Internet Explorer Logo

Internet Explorer 7, and especially 6, was notorious for breaking web standards compliant web sites because of how Microsoft interprets web technologies.  Browsers like Firefox, Opera and Safari aren’t perfect either, but they’re closer to that arguably unachievable mark.  But what about IE8?  Has it finally decided to adopt technology standards that are more consistent with the rest of the industry?  Is the browser more convenient to use than major competitors like Firefox and Opera?  I took a look around the Internet and here’s what I came up with.

Computer World

Computer World generally sings its praises by mentioning respectable improvements in the new version, like a superior tabbing feature compared to its earlier versions.  For example, “When you open a new tab from an existing page, the new one opens directly to the right of the originating one, and both tabs are given the same color. That way, all related tabs are automatically grouped and color-coded,” the article states.  Also, CW likes the new address bar, which now searches previously viewed web sites in a fashion that Firefox and Chrome already do.

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