Britney Spears is in October cover girl for the British edition of Glamour magazine. During his interview with the magazine, Spears opens up about her new body, her boyfriend Jason and more. Britney Spears covers the October 2011 issue of Glamour magazine, the British version, and you see the pictures below. In other Britney Spears news, the singer recently confirmed her next single from Femme Fatale album is number called criminals.
Ritney Spears talks to make the big 3-0 in December: "I think the older you get, the wiser you get. I'm very excited and definitely going to celebrate and do something spectacular. I will be in South America, so I have to do something pretty funny. A carnival of Britney."
On the possibility that Prince William and Kate Middleton attend one of her London gigs:
"It would be fantastic. It would be really weird and cool. I think they are a beautiful couple. Unfortunately I can not see the wedding, but I heard it was beautiful."
Lindsay Lohan is on the cover of the August issue of Italian Vanity Fair. The 25-year-old actor gives the camera her in a gingham breasts top and white short shorts and tells the magazine that she is not really the type of criminals who should never have been in prison.
Despite being under lock and key AKA house arrest for the month of June, can Lohan continued to snag the magazine cover. This issue hit newsstands yesterday, 6 July. Dui lucky she did not harm anyone. The jewelry she stole , I assume that in mind, her owners were not hurt when she left with their product without paying.
Here are some excerpts from the interview, Lindsay to get back to work, "In October I will start working," Lindsay said, adding: " I hope to spend next year on the set" Lindsay on his time in prison "Unless you are a murderer, I can not see any reason to be there," she said of her experience in prison.
Sharing your Netflix password with your friends so that they can enjoy its instant streaming feature? While that's already a moral no-no, it's soon going to be a crime in Tennessee, as a bill has been passed to make that practice illegal.
The bill awaits the governor's signature. While originally intended to target hackers and other criminals who sell this sort of login information in quantity, it also covers those who share information with friends and relatives.
The bill was backed by industry officials, who hope other states will follow. The bill is written to cover all subscriptions based services such as Netflix and Rhapsody.
It's not illegal to let your friends watch your subscription when you login and show it to themself yourself is it? No, but as Rep. Gerald McCormick, the bill's sponsor in the Tennessee house, said,
“What becomes not legal is if you send your username and password to all your friends so they can get free subscriptions."
They will use the IP address you use to access the service. So waitasec, I can login to Netflix myself from a friend's computer, or watch via my Android device, which will provide a different IP address. Isn't that legal? Here's what Netflix' Terms of Service says, as an example:
If you are on the Watch Instantly Unlimited plan or the 1-disc-out-at-a-time plan, you may watch only one device at a time. If you are on the 2-discs-out-at-a-time plan, you may watch on up to two devices at a time. Members on the 3-disc plan can watch on up to three devices. The maximum is four devices -- available for members on the 4-or-greater-discs-out-at-a-time plan.
In other words, depending on the plan, you can watch on one or more devices (up to four) simultaneously at a time. The assumption there is you might have someone at home watching via TV (of course, family living in the same home are OK) while you watch on your iPhone.
Odds are that small violations won't be noticed. Start giving it out to your entire company baseball team, and you might see a lawyer, at least in Tennessee, knocking on your door.
Russian security company ElcomSoft has released the first commercially available set of utilities that can cracking the encryption and passwords of iOS devices. Don't worry about criminals; that iDevice you are carrying is safe as long as you're not a criminal yourself, as part of the solution will only be available to law enforcement and forensic agencies.
The decryption tool also requires access to the actual device. Elcomsoft said the requirement was because they "need to obtain the encryption keys that are stored in (or computed by) the device and are not dumped or stored during typical physical acquisition." That's a good thing, but of course, if you are a criminal of some sort, the authorities won't have difficulty gaining access to your device.
While the decryption tool is sophisticated, the password cracker is simply a brute-force cracker, trying combinations until the password is guessed.
In February, however, researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute Secure Information Technology in Germany published a paper which described how to easily reveal most of the passwords stored on an iPhone, password-protected or not, in six minutes. The researchers also published a video, showing the actual results (below).
It's the second such "pocket dialing leads to arrest" story in less than a month, and you have to admit, it makes one wonder a) what kind of cell phones these criminals are using, and b) why they don't use a belt holster.
Authorities say a Georgia man "pocket-dialed" 911. The dispatcher on the other end of the line overheard people discussing a drug deal. The call was made around 1:30 a.m. on Wednesday morning.
Col. Jeff Strickland said the dispatcher could overhear several people speaking about a drug deal involving prescription drugs.
A deputy was sent to a Gainesville Waffle House restaurant, from where the police determined the call originated. The deputy eventually found the phone in an employee's pocket.
Daniel Moore, 18, was charged with possession of hydrocodone and alprazolam tablets.
Another teacher is in hot water over a Facebook post, and this one has been suspended. In this case, a first grade teacher at New Jersey's School 21 was suspended after posting a Facebook update that said she felt like a warden overseeing future criminals.
Earlier, it was reported that a teacher in Chicago, IL posted a picture of one of her students, a seven-year-old to Facebook. That wasn't the bad part: she, and other posters to her wall, then proceeded to mock the student.
The New Jersey teacher, who was not named, was suspended with pay on Thursday after posting the comment on Wednesday. Reportedly, a "significant" number of parents, having seen the posts Wednesday, arrived at the school, demanding that their children be removed from her class.
School board president Theodore Best said:
"The reason why she was suspended was because the incident created serious problems at the school that impeded the functioning of the building. You can't simply fire someone for what they have on a Facebook page; but if that spills over and affects the classroom then you can take action.
"This is not first time I've heard something like this from a teacher. Overall, I think we have really good teachers. But there's also a significant population of teachers here to collect the paycheck and don't have the best interests of the students in mind."
As a possible defense for the teacher, she may simply be burnt out. According to the New York Times, the Paterson district has 28,000 students and 2,425 teachers, and has "long been one of New Jersey’s most troubled school systems." In 1991, the state took over the district due to fiscal mismanagement and poor academic performance.
Still, teachers --- and others --- need to remember that posting on the Internet means anyone can read it. What happens in Las Vegas may stay in Las Vegas, but what's put on the Internet, doesn't necessarily stay there.
If you just stole a cell phone, and only minutes before, wouldn't you wonder why someone was calling you to buy it? After all, you hadn't had time to spread the word about your "treasure," so the only person who might know that number might be, oh, maybe: the owner.
Apparently that thought never crept into the (probably smaller than normal) brain of one Brian Westerfield. Westerfield stole a brand new smartphone from a proud new owner near the Walmart in Nampa, Idaho. The victim had just purchased the phone and was downloading apps (already) when police say Westerfield grabbed the phone and ran.
Rather than using high-tech methodology (like Find My iPhone or similar Android services), police and the victim used a low-tech sting. They called Westerfield and attempted to buy the phone. Sgt. Mike Wagoner said:
"The suspect didn't know that he was talking with the police. (They) dickered over the price for the phone and so when the suspect did show up the police obviously were there to meet him."
To make matters worse for Westerfield, he reportedly tripped and fell face first onto the ground while attempting to escape. Well, they say most criminals aren't the smartest people on the planet, and we suppose they aren't the most graceful, either.
Actor Gul Panag was harassed by unknown runners for the half marathon in New Delhi on Sunday. Gul, the regular runner and has participated in several marathons, was outraged when several men in the start of the race took the crowd to sit down, she says.
It's groping the woman syndrome and the place crowded Delhi typical. It is not even surprising. I am a marathon runner and I run a dozen marathons foreign environment. There are always crowded, but this was my first marathon in New Delhi. This is not the case in Mumbai. But as I said, your expectations in Delhi its share of culture, said Gul. To his credit, while nervous about the incident, Gul has completed the race in an easy, relaxed pace. I confirmed checked 2.20 hours.
A large contingent of celebrities from Mumbai has been in New Delhi for the event, including Bipasha Basu, Arshad Warsi, Rahul Bose, Urmila Matondkar and Dhanraj Pillai, but most of them confined to the stands cheering. While he recovered from this unpleasant incident, said Gul criminals took advantage of the confusion to escape, and there was not clearly identified, decided not to report to the police file. Asked if the organizers should have a separate lane in the future for women in Delhi Marathon, said Mr Gul is expected that basic decency involved in these events. However, I will participate in the marathon in New Delhi in the future. I am a fighter.
Throughout modern history, Tattoos have been associated with Criminality. Russian criminal tattoos have a complex system of symbols which can ‘read’ to give quite detailed information about the wearer. carry meaning but the area of the body on which they are placed may be meaningful too. Tattoos done in a Russian prison have a distinct bluish color and usually appear somewhat blurred because of the lack of instruments to draw fine lines. tattooed marks began to be placed on criminals as a punishment.
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