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Saturday 11 August 2012

China Is Taking Over The Fake ID Business

China Is Taking Over The Fake ID Business:
Fake ID traffic sign
Technology and globalisation are giving a boost to the trade in fake identity cards.
A pack of photo paper, laminating sheets, spray glue: it sounds like a list of things you need for the school art class. In fact they are ingredients for a fake identity card. Add a dash of Photoshop expertise, and you can earn yourself £1,000 (about $1,500) a week, according to a former vendor, a privately educated British schoolboy, who used to sell fake cards at £25 a time to his classmates.
The trade is even more profitable in America. Because the legal drinking age is 21, demand is higher and buyers are richer. An ex-student says he was able to sell bogus IDs for $120 each. Whereas he found holograms and bar codes on American driving licenses easy to forge, he failed to copy the magnetic strips. Unwisely, perhaps, some American states are now phasing out licenses with magnetic strips in favor of cheaper ones with bar codes.
The business of forged identity cards is booming, particularly in the Anglosphere. A study in 2009 of American university students found that 17% of freshmen and 32% of seniors owned a false ID. Today the numbers are even higher, experts reckon. Bars near American campuses have started to ask for two kinds of identification.
The use of fake IDs is spreading around the world. China has no great taboo against under-age drinking, so bar owners seldom check. But getting into an internet café is more difficult. One well-known place to get a card is the east gate of Renmin University in Beijing. Merchants there report that they can make 100,000 yuan ($16,000) a year.
Fake IDs used to be easy to detect, at least by experts, says Geoff Slagle of the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. The main problem, he says, were "flashpassers": youths who flash their cards at uninterested barmaids, who do nothing but check the photo on the card.
Yet technology has given the fake ID business a boost. With today's software and printers, good fakes are easier to make. Counterfeiters no longer need to produce one document at a time; the latest gear allows for mass-production. And since orders can be taken over the internet, the producers no longer need to be close to their customers.
At the same time, IDs themselves have become more sophisticated. This has driven counterfeiters to invest more and raise prices. A decade ago, a good fake card could be bought for between $35 and $50, according to David Myers, an identity-card expert in Florida. Now people have to be prepared to pay ten times more.
As a result, many ID mills have gone online and are now based in China and other Asian countries, where costs are low and forgers hard to prosecute. A popular site is ID Chief. "We are at it again. Here is the Mississippi license," it touts in its latest offer, which charges $200 for two cards. On August 6th four American senators sent a letter to the Chinese ambassador, asking the country to close down such firms.
Western countries could do something about the problem themselves. One improvement would be to introduce a standard national ID card, particularly in America. Not only does each state issue its own driving license, but there are also numerous other official identity cards. Five years ago Mr Myers counted 542. The figure has since grown, he says.
Fighting technology with technology seems most promising--by replacing ID cards with phones. In Britain a new scheme called Touch2id encodes fingerprints and proof of age on a smart sticker that is to be attached to a mobile. To get served, youths need to swipe their phone over a chip-reader and have their fingerprints scanned.
An overseas counterfeiter would have a hard time to trick such a system, says Edgar Whitley of the London School of Economics. Yet it is also pricey: the Touch2id scanners cost £200 each. Without government mandates or cash to pay for installing such devices, fake IDs are here to stay.


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ESET Nod32 Antivirus 5.0 Software (1-User) $4.99AR Free Shipping at Newegg

ESET Nod32 Antivirus 5.0 Software (1-User) $4.99AR Free Shipping at Newegg: Newegg Promo Code

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Today's Tech: Usain Bolt adds tweet record to gold haul, Google fined record $22.5 by FTC, and Microsoft Surface may sink OEMs

Today's Tech: Usain Bolt adds tweet record to gold haul, Google fined record $22.5 by FTC, and Microsoft Surface may sink OEMs: Today's Tech: Usain Bolt adds tweet record to gold haul, Google fined record $22.5 by FTC, and Microsoft Surface may sink OEMs
Elsewhere, Casio wants to prove that tablets aren't just play toys, launching a range of ruggedised devices aimed at retail workers.
Read more: http://www.itproportal.com/2012/08/10/todays-tech-usain-bolt-adds-tweet-record-to-gold-haul-google-fined-record-225-by-ftc-and-microsoft-surface-may-sink-oems/

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Malware goes pro with ‘Gauss’

Malware goes pro with ‘Gauss’: Malware goes pro with ‘Gauss’
A new cyber-weapon called Gauss has been unleashed, but it’s unlikely that those who released it know what they're doing.
Read more: http://www.itproportal.com/2012/08/11/malware-goes-pro-with-gauss/




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This Week’s Must-Have iOS Games: Ghostbusters, Tiny War XD, Pitfall! & More [Roundup]

This Week’s Must-Have iOS Games: Ghostbusters, Tiny War XD, Pitfall! & More [Roundup]:

Heading up this week’s must-have iOS games roundup is a brand new Ghostbusters game that promises to be the best augmented reality game in the App Store. We also have a great online strategy game in the form of Tiny War XD, Activision’s legendary Pitfall!, and more.

Ghostbusters Paranormal Blast — Universal ($0.99)


No matter how much you dance around in your pants whistling the theme tune, you’ll never be a Ghostbuster. You can get pretty close, however, with Ghostbusters Paranormal Blast for iOS, which promises to be the “best augmented reality game ever to hit the App Store.” Using your iOS device’s camera, it gives you the opportunity to battle ghosts in your neighborhood and rid your own city of the paranormal.
“Turn you mobile device into your most powerful weapon against paranormal menaces and kick some ectoplasmic butt!”
This title features high-resolution 3D visuals for devices with a Retina display, with well-known foes like Slimer and Spectral Librarian, plus 14 new ghosts to hunt and collect across more than 20 missions. You’ll get rewarded for every ghost you bust, allowing you to upgrade your Proton Pack, Neutrona Want, Flight Suit, and Ghost Trap.
Why aren’t there more augmented reality games like this on iOS?

Tiny War XD — Universal ($0.99)


Tiny War XD is a terrific massively multiplayer online war strategy game, in which you develop your own military base, produce weapons and train troops, then deploy them to fight against enemies and rival players in an effort to expand your military dominance.
Tiny War’s ease of play and richness sets it apart from other games; it will also test your military strategy as you battle for supremacy. The game is packed with loads of buildings to construct, many types of troops, and tons of missions to complete. A unique battle format and special 3D mini games offer a rewarding and fun gaming experience.
The great thing about Tiny War is you can develop your fortress while you’re offline, so that it’s ready to go when you get connected. It promises “tons of things to build, missions to complete, [and] bases to attack.” The worst thing about it is that it’s hugely addictive, so be prepared for that. You have been warned.

Pitfall! — Universal ($0.99)


Remember the 1982 Activision classic Pitfall! from the Atari 2600? It’s probably been a while since you played it, but that’s about to change. The jungle-crawler has been revamped and relaunched on iOS — 30 years after its first debut — promising thrilling new environments and twists on the classic gameplay that will “appeal to fans of all generations.”
The free-running adventure has been likened to titles like Temple Run. Your mission is simple: run as far as you can through ever changing environments with narrow trenches, dark caverns, and cascading waterfalls. Along the way you’ll level up and trade in your loot to unlock handy power-ups that will enhance your experience and “customize your wardrobe.” When you hit those high scores, you can share them on Facebook and Twitter to stake your claim as the king of the jungle.
Whether you played the original or not, Pitfall! on iOS is well worth a look — especially if you enjoy free-running games that are hard to put down. It’s a universal title compatible with all your iOS devices, priced at just $0.99.

Draw Breaker — iPhone ($0.99) / iPad ($1.99)

http://youtu.be/S-YVfRuyHBk
Brick breaking games have been around for as long as I have, but Draw Breaker offers a unique twist. Rather that moving a platform from side to side to hit the ball, you draw your own platform.
Draw Breaker takes the classic brick breaker genre, but adds a TWIST—you control the ball by DRAWING PLATFORMS. You have complete freedom to aim your shots by drawing platforms at any angle. Create shots that are impossible in other breakout style games. This was how breakout was meant to be played on a touch screen device.
There are five episodes to play, each of which have nine unique episodes. You’ll battle 16 monsters throughout, each with their own personalities and abilities, and there are ten power-ups to help you along, including bomb balls, acid balls, fire balls, and multiballs.

What’s Your Favorite?

So that concludes our list of this week’s must-have iOS games. If you’ve picked up something that you think we should have included, be sure to let us know about it in the comments.

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Unknown Actor Soliciting Partners for Mars Rover Hack

Unknown Actor Soliciting Partners for Mars Rover Hack: Somebody with a fair idea on how compromising NASA's Curiosity mission might work is soliciting help from Anonymous on IRC, security firm Flashpoint Partners reports.



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Remotely Controlling Home Appliances via IPv6

Remotely Controlling Home Appliances via IPv6: Researchers in Germany have recently developed a new wireless, Internet aware power control module that will allow a person to remotely control plugged-in home appliances. Plug-in modules for home automation ...

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Tiny Windows Borders 1.0 (Freeware)

Tiny Windows Borders 1.0 (Freeware): Adjust the border size on Windows 8 (read more)


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Secure Copy 6.0.2.1 (Demo)

Secure Copy 6.0.2.1 (Demo): Automates data migration and replication (read more)


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dearcycle (Freeware)

dearcycle (Freeware): An original truetype font (read more)


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Deanna (Freeware)

Deanna (Freeware): This is an original TTF character (read more)


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Dearest 1.0 (Freeware)

Dearest 1.0 (Freeware): An original TTF character (read more)


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Dearest 1.0 (Freeware)

Dearest 1.0 (Freeware): An original TTF character (read more)


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Food Pyramid 1.0.0003 (Freeware)

Food Pyramid 1.0.0003 (Freeware): Analyze the components of the food pyramid (read more)


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Is the Ida fossil the missing link?

Is the Ida fossil the missing link?: On May 19, 2009, researchers unveiled a fossil called Ida. Within hours, headlines were abuzz with news of the missing link. But a day later, many scientists weren't so sure.

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