HIGHLY POTENT NEWS THAT MIGHT CHANGE YOUR VIEWS

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VIDEO — “Snoopy” Drone That Can Hack Your Smart Phone

by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network
Apr 11, 2014

A London based company named Sensepoint security researchers have developed a drone called ‘Snoopy’. The drone can hack into a person’s smart phone by “spoofing” a wifi signal.

The best way to protect yourself from hackers and/or government agencies (police use similar handheld devices) who are utilizing this type of software, is to keep wifi on your phone turned off until necessary.


VIDEO — Social Media Bans Helped Erdogan Win Election – Turkish Girl

108morris108
Apr 9, 2014


VIDEO — Sneaky Social Network: US busted over subversive Cuban Twitter campaign

RT
Apr 8, 2014

America’s International Development agency admitted to running a Twitter-like social network in Cuba, However, it dismissed allegations it was an attempt to undermine the government, saying everything it did was completely within the law. But as RT’s Gayane Chichakyan reports, not everyone’s convinced.

READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/4b56jl


‘Techneck’ wrinkles caused by constantly using smart devices

by L.J. Devon, Staff Writer
Natural News
Mar 1, 2014

(NaturalNews) In an age of constant mobile device usage, where tech obsessives constantly look down to their handheld screens, a new sign of aging is emerging.

Tech obsessives are beginning to look older from the face down, as “techneck” wrinkles begin showing up as creases on their necks.

View example here.

Walk through a mall, go to a restaurant, look around and notice how some people are more in touch with their digital life than their waking life. Take inventory of your own personal habits. How often do you stare down at a screen?

More clinicians helping tech-obsessives remove their neck wrinkles

Caught up in today’s constant information stream and social networking buzz, people of all ages routinely go head down while staring into a screen. The emergence of text messaging, social media, iPods, smartphones, tablets — you name it — has beckoned a generation of tech obsessives who bury their heads in a digital world.

Clinicians are now noticing that this constant head-down posture is creating creases that ring around patient’s necks. This new face-furrow has become the modern sign of aging. The wrinkles, first observed during patient visits for neck treatments, are the new mark signifying tech-obsessive behavior. Non-surgical experts have begun to receive patient concerns hoping to have the wrinkles removed. A treatment nicknamed “Microlift” has even been invented, as people look to remove their self-inflicted”techneck” creases.

As “techneck” wrinkles begin showing up on more people’s necks, they will be categorized with other aging indicators like “laughter lines,” “crows’ feet” or “worry wrinkles.”

Dean Nathanson, Managing Director of CACI International, commented on the issue, “We’re a hard working nation and our hectic everyday lives mean that keeping one’s head down, be it buried in work emails or in an e-reader, is completely the norm.” He continues, “Recently we noticed a surge in enquiries for our product, specifically to combat lines around the neck area.”

Tech obsession can be dangerous to relationships, posture

Not only does tech addiction carve out networks of wrinkles on the neck, but it also deprives people of real-life interaction and affection, causing people to lose their appreciation and connection with people and nature.

This addiction can be a distraction during commutes, leading to accidents on the road. It can interrupt a person’s sex life. It’s easy to be distracted by handheld devices in the middle of performing everyday tasks. It’s easy to look down and stare into devices like smartphones or iPods while lying in bed, working at the desk or talking to other people.

This tech obsession may keep people up to date in today’s information age, but constant looking down into a screen makes one look like a zombie. In addition, clinicians point out that this habit is not good for back pain, neck pain or overall good posture.

Josh Catlett, a chartered physiotherapist, says, “Our bodies are not designed to be in the same position for long periods and many people also get into bad postures when using these devices. As a result, physiotherapists are seeing patients with neck, back and shoulder problems and also pain in the hands and wrists. It is important that people recognise the need to take regular breaks from using such devices and also to consider their posture at all times.”

Sources for this article include:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk


VIDEO — Jeff Rense & Neil Sanders – The Wicked Social Media Trap

Rense
Feb 27, 2014

Clip from February 18, 2014 – guest Neil Sanders on the Jeff Rense Program. Full program available in Archives at http://www.renseradio.com/signup.htm

[related video: Jeff Rense & Neil Sanders – Your Thoughts Are Not Your Own]


VIDEO — CrossTalk: Facebook = Spybook?

RT
Feb 7, 2014

How has Facebook redefined what we call “community”? What role social media played in Arab Spring uprisings? What kind of relationship Facebook should have with government? And, what can we expect in the next decade? CrossTalking with Clive Thompson, Austin Petersen and Ed Krayewski.

Watch all CrossTalk shows here:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=… (Sep 2009 – Feb 2011)
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=… (Mar 2011 – Jul 2012)
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=… (Jul 2012 – current)

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Zuckerberg sells 41.4 million Facebook shares for $2.3 billion

Intellihub
Jan 25, 2014

Is this massive sell off a sign of trouble behind the scenes at Facebook?

By John Vibes

(INTELLIHUB) — After experiencing some censorship issues, us at Intellihub have started paying close attention to what is going on behind the scenes at Facebook.

One theme that has been common in our research, is the idea that Facebook is in the midst of a decline, and that the social network will soon lose dominance, in favor of websites that offer a more secure, and censorship free platform.

Not only have there been market studies and mathematical models to show that the decline of Facebook is taking place, but there have also been some telltale signs in terms stock activity.

After just establishing the IPO less than two years ago, Founder Mark Zuckerberg just unloaded 41.4 million Facebook shares for $2.3 billion, ensuring that even if the stock price collapses, he will remain wealthy, Aljazeera reported.

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