Sunday, July 28, 2013

ATM hacker dies in California - Sat, 27 Jul 2013 PST

SAN FRANCISCO ? A prominent hacker who discovered a way to have ATMs spit out cash and was set to deliver a talk about hacking pacemakers and other wireless implantable medical devices has died in San Francisco, authorities and his employer?said.

Barnaby Jack died at his home in San Francisco on Thursday, although the cause of death is still under investigation, San Francisco Deputy Coroner Kris Barbrich?said.

Jack, who was in his mid-30s, was scheduled to speak Thursday at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. The headline of his talk was ?Implantable Medical Devices: Hacking Humans,? according??


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SAN FRANCISCO ? A prominent hacker who discovered a way to have ATMs spit out cash and was set to deliver a talk about hacking pacemakers and other wireless implantable medical devices has died in San Francisco, authorities and his employer?said.

Barnaby Jack died at his home in San Francisco on Thursday, although the cause of death is still under investigation, San Francisco Deputy Coroner Kris Barbrich?said.

Jack, who was in his mid-30s, was scheduled to speak Thursday at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. The headline of his talk was ?Implantable Medical Devices: Hacking Humans,? according to a synopsis on the Black Hat conference?website.

Jack planned to reveal software that uses a common transmitter to scan for and ?interrogate? individual medical implants, the website?said.

Jack made headlines at the Black Hat conference in 2010 when he demonstrated his ability to hack stand-alone ATMs. He was able to hack them in two ways ? remotely and using physical keys that come with the?machines.

? Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2013/jul/27/atm-hacker-dies-in-california/

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During a staff retreat at Chickamauga Lake in Tennessee on Wednesday Vanderbilt football coach James Franklin jumped from a cli...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Jul 27, 2013 @ 11:44am ET)

9:00 PM: CBS 4 Denver reports on a black bear that wandered into a bar in Estes Park, Colorado. A local resident followed the bear into the bar and tried to warn the people inside, but he said the patrons were "oblivious" to their new visitor.

8:45 PM: Minnesota Wild goalie Josh Harding has started a new charity called Harding's Hope to help raise awareness & funds for people battling multiple sclerosis. Harding was diagnosed with MS last September but continued to play last season.

8:30 PM: Video of Memphis Tigers QB Jacob Kaman playing piano & singing along with Breanna Bercegeay, an 11-year-old girl battling leukemia. The impromptu performance occured during a visit by Kaman to St. Jude Children's Hospital.

8:15 PM: WSB-TV reports on Zna Gresham, a 10-year-old girl who caught a 1-month-old baby that fell from a burning apartment in Decatur, Georgia on Thursday.

8:00 PM: A marijuana legalization advocacy group plans to air a pro-pot, anti-alcohol ad outside the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for this weekend's Brickyard 400 NASCAR race.

7:45 PM: New York Jets cornerback Aaron Berry is out for the season after suffering a torn ACL during practice Friday. Berry had collided with receiver Joseph Collins during a passing drill.

7:30 PM: Minnesota Twins catcher Joe Mauer will not rejoin the team in Seattle as he will spend the series at home with his newborn twin daughters, who were born five weeks premature.

7:15 PM: Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin has joined Twitter and presents this first tweet: "Hello Twitter. Expect no BS from me. Just straight fire!"

7:00 PM: Florida Gators football coach Will Muschamp has received a $250,000 raise, but is still only the 7th highest paid coach in the SEC.

6:45 PM: An Atlanta AAU basketball team at a national tournament in Las Vegas has been wearing "I Am Trayvon" shirts before & after games in honor of Trayvon Martin.

6:30 PM: In an interview with Fortune magazine, former FBI director Louis Freeh said there was criticism but "not one disputed fact" about his report on the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.

6:15 PM: Chicago Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville has been signed to a three-year contract extension through the 2016-17 season.

6:00 PM: Receiver Braylon Edwards, who recently re-signed with the New York Jets, said about watching last year's team: "Nobody sells mouthwash that could wash the taste of that out of my mouth."

5:45 PM: Former Miami Dolphins player Donald Bessillieu was arrested in Columbus, Georgia on Thursday on charges of drug possession & driving without a license. Bessillieu had previously been arrested on drug charges last February after he was caught flagging down a known prostitute.

5:30 PM: Former NBA player Kenny Anderson said about finally revealing that he was sexually abused as a child: "This is therapy for me, and maybe people who follow me or are fans of mine, they went through this. More people will talk and let more people know what's going on in their lives, catch it early."

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=54447

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Third Chinese girl dies from injuries in SF crash

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, firefighters, lower center, stand by a tarpaulin sheet covering the body of a Chinese teen struck by a fire truck during the emergency response to the crash of Asiana Flight 214 at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco. The girl was hit by a fire truck while covered with firefighting foam, authorities said Friday, July 12, revealing a startling detail that suggested she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, firefighters, lower center, stand by a tarpaulin sheet covering the body of a Chinese teen struck by a fire truck during the emergency response to the crash of Asiana Flight 214 at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco. The girl was hit by a fire truck while covered with firefighting foam, authorities said Friday, July 12, revealing a startling detail that suggested she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, a firefighter, right, stands by a tarpaulin sheet covering the body of a Chinese teen struck by a fire truck during the emergency response to the crash of Asiana Flight 214 at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco. The girl was hit by a fire truck while covered with firefighting foam, authorities said Friday, July 12, revealing a startling detail that suggested she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, a tarpaulin sheet, to the right of the fire truck, covers the body of a Chinese teen struck by a fire truck during the emergency response to the crash of Asiana Flight 214 at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco. The girl was hit by a fire truck while covered with firefighting foam, authorities said Friday, July 12, revealing a startling detail that suggested she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

A man walks under a wing of Asiana Flight 214, which crashed on Saturday, July 6, 2013, at San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco, Friday, July 12, 2013. Two people were killed and dozens of others injured although most suffered minor injuries. Investigators have said the plane came in too low and slow. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

The rear of Asiana Flight 214, which crashed on Saturday, July 6, 2013, is seen at San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco, Friday, July 12, 2013. Two people were killed and dozens of others injured although most suffered minor injuries. Investigators have said the plane came in too low and slow. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

(AP) ? A girl who had been in intensive care since the crash-landing of an Asiana Airlines flight has died, hours after authorities confirmed one of the two Chinese teenagers killed in the disaster was hit by a fire truck speeding to the crash site.

The disclosure about the Chinese teenager raised the tragic possibility that she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath.

No one knows yet whether the two teens lived through the initial impact at the San Francisco airport. But police and fire officials confirmed Friday that Ye Meng Yuan, 16, was hit by a fire truck racing to extinguish the blazing Boeing 777.

"The fire truck did go over the victim at least one time. Now the other question is what was the cause of death?" police spokesman Albie Esparza said. "That's what we are trying to determine right now."

San Mateo County Coroner Robert Foucrault said the results of his initial inquiry into the deaths would likely be released sometime next week. He would not comment on the police investigation.

Her close friend Wang Linjia, also 16, was among a group of injured passengers who did not get immediate medical help. Rescuers did not spot her until 14 minutes after the crash. Wang Linjia's body was found along with three flight attendants who were flung onto the tarmac.

The other girl, also from China, died Friday morning. San Francisco General Hospital said she had been in critical condition since arriving Saturday after the accident. Officials did not identify the girl at the request of her parents. Her age was also withheld.

Moments after the July 6 crash, while rescuers tried to help passengers near the burning fuselage, Wang Linjia and the flight attendants lay in the rubble almost 2,000 feet away. A group of survivors called 911 and tried to help them.

Members of the group ? martial arts athletes and their families returning from a competition in South Korea ? said that after escaping the plane, they sat with at least four victims who appeared to be seriously hurt. They believe one of them was one of the girls who died.

Cindy Stone, who was in that group, was recorded by California Highway Patrol dispatchers calling in for help: "There are no ambulances here. We've been on the ground 20 minutes. There are people lying on the tarmac with critical injuries, head injuries. We're almost losing a woman here. We're trying to keep her alive."

San Francisco Fire Department spokeswoman Mindy Talmadge said Friday that when airport personnel reached the group near the seawall, Linjia was dead. She did not know when the girl had died.

The flight attendants remained hospitalized Friday.

Talmadge also confirmed that an Associated Press photograph of a body under a yellow tarp near the burned-out jet was the other victim, Meng Yuan.

The photo, taken from above, shows firefighters looking down at the tarp, and there are truck track marks leading up to it.

Police said the teenager was covered in foam that rescuers had sprayed on the burning wreckage. When the truck moved while battling the flames, rescuers discovered her body, Esparza said.

"The driver may not have seen the young lady in the blanket of foam," said Ken Willette of the National Firefighter Protection Agency, which sets national standards for training airfield firefighters. "These could be factors contributing to this tragic event."

He said fire trucks that responded to the Asiana crash would have started shooting foam while approaching the fuselage from 80 or 100 feet away. The foam was sprayed from a canon on the top of the truck across the ground to clear a safe path for evacuees. That was supposed to create a layer of foam on the ground that is several inches high before the truck gets to the plane.

The victims were close friends and top students, looking forward to spending a few weeks at a Christian summer camp in California, where they planned to practice English and boosting their chances of attending a U.S. college.

Their parents were flown to San Francisco after their deaths where the Chinese consulate was caring for them.

September Mao, who attends the girls' school in the city of Jiangshan and knew them both, said Wang was outgoing and popular, and often interviewed her classmates as a student reporter. She said Ye was a very good singer and speaker, "loved to smile, and liked to share everything and anything that is happy."

Photos of the girls showed the pair with wide grins flashing peace sign. In one photo, they formed their arms into the shape of a heart.

The airliner collided with a rocky seawall just short the runway. Dozens of other passengers were injured, and although 182 were taken to hospitals, most suffered only minor injuries.

Nearly a week after the crash, the investigation indicates the pilots, a trainee and his instructor, failed to realize until too late that the aircraft was dangerously low and flying too slow.

Nothing disclosed so far by the National Transportation Safety Board investigators indicates any problems with the Boeing 777's engines, computers or automated systems.

__

Associated Press Writer Jason Dearen contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-07-13-San%20Francisco%20Airliner%20Crash/id-37546f5fb0074928ae1fc472a5aeb747

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Another state bans Google Glass from casinos

google glass

8 hours ago

Google co-founder Sergey Brin, left, wears Google Glass glasses at an announcement for the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences at Genentech Hall on UC...

Jeff Chiu / AP file

Google co-founder Sergey Brin, left, wears Google Glass glasses, at a February event.

Delaware has joined several other states in banning Google Glass at its casinos.

The Delaware State Lottery announced on Friday that it was banning Google Glass and similar devices from the state's three casinos.

The agency said any patron wearing Google Glass or similar devices must remove them or be subject to eviction.

Google Glass, developed by Google, is the tiny eyeglasses-mounted device capable of shooting photos, filming video and surfing the Internet.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e974e40/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Canother0Estate0Ebans0Egoogle0Eglass0Ecasinos0E6C10A621634/story01.htm

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