Technology Impacts

Social and Ethical Information Technology Impacts in a Global Society (ITGS)

Archive for November, 2009

news_warcraft_649001aWhen it began it was just a computer game. Now it is seen as a cultural force that sparks love affairs, breaks marriages and creates “sweat shops” to satisfy a black market in virtual goods.

World of Warcraft marks its fifth birthday today as something more than just an online role-playing game where users become wizards, warriors, orcs and elfs.

“It has had an enormous cultural impact,” said Tom Chatfield, author of Fun. Inc, a book about the growth of the games industry. “It has proved that online gaming can make huge profits, making a billion in revenue a year. It has proved that gaming could be for a truly global audience.”

Analysts say that its popularity has paved the way for other blockbuster games. This month Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, made a record-breaking $500 million (£303 million) within 24 hours of its release.

Virtual quests lead to real love and death for World of Warcraft fans - Times Online.

Age of cyber warfare is ‘dawning’

Posted by Mohammed S On November - 18 - 2009

_46741216_war-ap226_jpgCyber war has moved from fiction to fact, says a report.

Compiled by security firm McAfee, it bases its conclusion on analysis of recent net-based attacks.

Analysis of the motives of the actors behind many attacks carried out via the internet showed that many were mounted with a explicitly political aim.

It said that many nations were now arming to defend themselves in a cyber war and readying forces to conduct their own attacks.

While definitions of what constitutes cyber war are not shared, it was clear that many nations were preparing for a future in which conflict was partly conducted via the net. Read the rest of this entry »

Is Your Facebook Profile As Private As You Think?

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

facebookMuch has been made in recent years of the so-called Facebook generation, which supposedly consists of 20-somethings who like to go online and spill their guts without regard for privacy. The reality is more complex.

Yes, social network users post a lot of personal information. But they’re sharing it within a circle of online “friends.” And they fiercely resist outsiders’ attempts to get a peek.

Last summer, city administrators in Bozeman, Mont., began requiring job applicants to provide usernames and passwords to their social networking accounts, as part of the background check. The new requirement caused such an uproar, the city manager held a press conference to apologize.

Is Your Facebook Profile As Private As You Think? : NPR.

FDIC Warns Banks to Watch for ‘Money Mules’ Duped by Hackers

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

baby_muleBank customers are increasingly being duped into acting as “money mules” for hackers, unwittingly laundering cash stolen from business bank accounts, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation warned the nation’s financial institutions on Thursday.

Using specialized Trojan horse malware, cybercrooks have been intercepting web-banking credentials from the computers of small and midsize businesses, and then initiating wire transfers to mules around the country. The mules are consumers who’ve been lured into fake work-at-home scams, in which their employment involves receiving money transfers and then forwarding the funds to Eastern Europe, either directly or through other mules.

FDIC Warns Banks to Watch for ‘Money Mules’ Duped by Hackers | Threat Level | Wired.com.

Europe plots black boxes for cars

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

car black boxThe European Commission’s study into feasibility of fitting black box recorders to cars to record 20 types of data in case of accidents looks set to recommend the devices are fitted to all European cars.

Project Veronica, which began in 2003 and cost £2.4m, has dismissed privacy concerns because the boxes only record data in the event of an accident. The boxes will be triggered by sudden deceleration and will only record movement in the 30 seconds prior to an accident, and a few seconds afterwards.

The Commission hopes the boxes will have an impact on road safety by improving accident reconstruction, as well as helping police and insurance companies.

via Europe plots black boxes for cars • The Register.

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Mr Richard is the Head of ICT at a leading Bilingual International School in the Middle East and keen privacy advocate.

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