From Google To Yahoo, Tech Grapples With White Male Discontent Slashdotby msmash on google at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 11:34 pm)

Reader joshtops shares a Bloomberg report: Google isn't the only Silicon Valley employer being accused of hostility to white men. Yahoo and Tata Consultancy Services were already fighting discrimination lawsuits brought by white men before Google engineer James Damore ignited a firestorm -- and got himself fired -- with an internal memo criticizing the company's diversity efforts and claiming women are biologically less suited than men to be engineers. The Yahoo case began last year when two men sued, claiming they'd been unfairly fired after managers allegedly manipulated performance evaluations to favor women. They claim Marissa Mayer approved the review process and was involved in their terminations, and last month a judge ordered the former chief executive be deposed. TCS, meanwhile, is fighting three men who claim the Mumbai-based firm discriminates against non-Indians at its U.S. offices.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Trump authorises probe into China's trade practices AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:30 pm)

US president signs presidential memo directing an investigation into China's alleged theft of US intellectual property.
What is the legacy of Indian subcontinent partition? AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:30 pm)

India and Pakistan celebrate 70 years of independence, which was followed by three wars between the countries.
The Added Benefits of VoIP - What Can it Bring to Your Business? (IT Toolbox Blogs) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:30 pm)

Get a Glimpse of the Newest Features in ERP (IT Toolbox Blogs) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:30 pm)

Opera Kills Off Its Free Data-Saving App, Opera Max Slashdotby msmash on android at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 11:04 pm)

Mark Wycislik-Wilson, writing for BetaNews: Opera Max -- the free data-saving and VPN-like tool from the team behind the Opera web browser -- is being killed off. The app has been removed from Google Play with immediate effect, and there will be no more updates. Opera is not really giving a reason for the sudden decision other that the fact that Opera Max had "a substantially different value proposition than our browser products."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[no title] Scripting News(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:03 pm)

We are right now at peak peach. If you love a peach as I do now's the time.
2017 Faces of Fraud: Mobile Exploits Come of Age (InfoRiskToday) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at August 14, 2017, 11:00 pm)

AWS launches data security service called Macie with machine learning (ZDNet) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at August 14, 2017, 10:30 pm)

I Bought a Book About the Internet From 1994 and None of the Links Worked Slashdotby msmash on internet at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:04 pm)

An anonymous reader shares a report (condensed for space and clarity): For crate-diggers of all stripes, the internet is awesome for one reason: The crate never ends. There's always something new to find online, because people keep creating new things to throw into that crate. But that crate has a hole at the bottom. Stuff is falling out just as quickly, and pieces of history that would stick around in meatspace disappear in an instant online. So as a result, there aren't a lot of websites from 1995 that made it through to the present day. Gopher sites? Odds are low. Text files? Perhaps. The endless pace of linkrot has left books about the internet in a curious limbo -- they're dead trees about the dead-tree killer, after all. [...] Recently, I bought a book -- a reference book, the kind that you can still pick up at Barnes and Noble today. The book, titled Free $tuff From the Internet (Coriolis Group Books, 1994), promises to help you find free content online. And, crucially, it focuses less on the web, which was still quite young, than on many of the alternative protocols of the era. This book links to FTP sites, telnet servers, and Gopher destinations, and I've tried many of them in an effort to figure out whether something, anything in this book works in the present day. These FTP servers were often based at universities which have a vested interest in keeping information online for a long-term period -- think the University of North Carolina, or Kansas State University. But despite this, I could not get most of these servers to load -- they were long ago murdered by the World Wide Web.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

JSON-PP-Monkey-0.1.0 search.cpan.orgby Adriano Ferreira at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:03 pm)

JSON::PP with encoding fallbacks
BEGIN-Lift-0.05 search.cpan.orgby Stevan Little at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:03 pm)

Lift subroutine calls into the BEGIN phase
Beam-Minion-0.004 search.cpan.orgby Doug Bell at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:03 pm)

A distributed task runner for Beam::Wire containers
Moxie-0.03 search.cpan.orgby Stevan Little at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:03 pm)

Not Another Moose Clone
Method-Traits-0.05 search.cpan.orgby Stevan Little at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at August 14, 2017, 10:03 pm)

Apply traits to your methods