"Twitter's DNS records were temporarily compromised but have now been fixed," the rs 2007 gold company said in a brief statement on its Web site. based Dyn Inc. Tom Daly, chief technology officer at Dyn, said the incident was not the result of a security failure on its services. Daly said it appears someone changed Twitter's DNS records to point visitors to a different Internet address using the proper account credentials assigned to Twitter (image above courtesy Trend Micro)."Someone logged in who purported to be a legitimate user of their [DNS] platform account and started making changes," Daly said.
Woven through this story are the people who may one day play Citizen Zero the players that build their lives and their identity around online gaming communities. The stories follow a clan of gamers called iCOR, they're preparing for the Cybergames World Cup in Korea. Multi player games are already massive in Korea with around two million players. The size and excitement of the World Cup with hundreds of thousands of dollars at stake, shows just how big these games are becoming.
GOP Turns Fury On Schiff Over Russian Collusion ClaimsMueller found no coordination or conspiracy involving Trump, his campaign and the Russian government, the Justice Department said Sunday. That sparked furious GOP calls for Rep. Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, to resign from the committee or Congress as the Trump administration went on the offensive, recriminations in mind, with the 2020 elections nearing.
Other guy said that media is partly at fault for this incident for fear mongering that cops are racist and out to kill black people, making it seem like black people in America don have any(or little) justification for being weary in dealing with police officers. His comments comes off as that the media blows out of portion interaction between the black community and police for clicks and $$$, which they do to a extent, but not to the point where black people attitude towards police are unwarranted and not justifiable.
But innovation has seen Dr Craig Venter achieve implausible goals in the past. He believes a breakthrough is imminent, and the millions of organisms collected by this vessel, and also from beneath the earth's crust, will provide building blocks for synthetic organisms he hopes will power the planet with greener energy. Already, Dr Craig Venter's team has achieved two milestones transferring the genome of one bacterium into another and separately, manufacturing a genome from scratch. The final step is to combine the two transplanting a synthetic genome into a living bacterial cell.