Wednesday, June 15, 2011

26,000 sex website passwords exposed by LulzSec



Red light district
The notorious LulzSec hacking group has published login passwords for almost 26,000 users of an x-rated porn website.
The hackers compromised the database of the hardcore website (called “Pron”), exposing not only the email addresses and passwords of over 25,000 members but also the credentials of 55 administrators of other adult websites.
Furthermore, LulzSec drew particular attention to various government and military email addresses (.mil and .gov) that appeared to have accounts with the porn website..
To add insult to injury, the LulzSec group called on its many recent Twitter followers to exploit the situation, by logging into Facebook with the email/password combinations and tell the victim’s Facebook friends and family about their porn habit.
Porn passwords
It should go without saying that logging into someone else’s account without their permission is against the law in most countries around the world.
Fortunately, it’s reported that Facebook’s security team responded quickly to the threat – and reset the passwords for all of the accounts it had which matched the email addresses exposed. Of course, it’s still possible that those email address/password combinations are being used on other websites.
If anything should be a reminder to internet users of the importance of usingdifferent passwords for different websites, this should be it.
The danger is that once one password has been compromised, it’s only a matter of time before the fraudsters will be able to gain access to your other accounts and steal information for financial gain or, in this case, potential embarrassment.
If you believe there might be a chance that your username/password were exposed, or if you’re simply in the habit of using the same password for multiple websites – now is the time to change your habits.

Facebook Users DROP In U.S.: Millions Left The Social Network In May 2011


Facebook Users DROP In U.S.: Millions Left The Social Network In May 2011

Facebook Traffic
Facebook is almost at 700 million users, but it recently experienced big dips in U.S. and Canadian growth.
According to Inside Facebook, the social networking site hit 687 million monthly users in June, though the growth rate overall has been slower than normal for the past two months. Though for the past year Facebook has grown by at least 20 million users each month, in April and in May, it grew by 13.9 and 11.8 million respectively.
And in the U.S. and in Canada, Facebook actually lost users.
U.S. accounts fell by close to 6 million, from 155.2 million at the beginning of May to 149.4 million at the end. This marks the first time American Facebook membership has dropped in the last year. Canadian users also fell by about 1.5 million.
Inside Facebook notes that once about 50 percent of a country’s population is on Facebook, growth basically stops. Indeed, losses over 100,000 were recorded by the U.K., Norway, and Russia.
Meanwhile, Facebook’s growth was bolstered by gains in developing countries like Mexico, Brazil and India, each of which picked up about 2 million users from May to June.
TechCrunch also pointed out that Twitter and LinkedIn are making big gains in many of the surveyed countries, with Twitter coming in as the number two social network for the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Australia, Germany and France.

Happy 100th Birthday, IBM!


Happy 100th Birthday, IBM!

IBM will celebrate its centennial anniversary this week by having up to 400,000 employees worldwide skip the usual office work in order to donate time to charitable causes and schools.
This “Celebration of Service” will take place on June 15, one day before the actual IBM anniversary.
Happy 100th Birthday, IBM!
IBMers are being encouraged to pick projects that use their technical skills — and some charitable organizations say they know exactly how they plan to put them to work.
Family Services of Westchester, for instance, expects two dozen IBMers to march into the not-for-profit private agency’s headquarters this week to work on programming a website and database.MORE

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Sony Pictures attacked again, 4.5 million records exposed

 

Sony Pictures Website Hacked, 1 Million Accounts Exposed
The same hackers who recently attacked PBS.org have turned their attention back to Sony by releasing the latest dump of information stolen from Sony’s websites.
While the information disclosed includes approximately 150,000 records, the hackers claim the databases exposed contain over 4.5 million records, at least a million of which include user information.
The data stolen includes:
  • A link to a vulnerable sonypictures.com webpage. 
  • 12,500 users related to Auto Trader (Contest entrants?) including birth dates, addresses, email addresses, full names, plain text passwords, user IDs and phone numbers.
     
  • 21,000 IDs associated with a DB table labeled “BEAUTY_USERS” including email addresses and plain text passwords.
     
  • ~20,000 Sony Music coupons (out of 3.5 million in the DB).
     
  • Just under 18,000 emails and plain text passwords from a Seinfeld “Del Boca” sweepstakes.
     
  • Over 65,000 Sony Music codes.
     
  • Several other tables including those from Sony BMG in The Netherlands and Belgium.
The attackers, LulzSec, stated in their file titled “PRETENTIOUS PRESS STATEMENT.txt”:
“SonyPictures.com was owned by a very simple SQL injection, one of the most primitive and common vulnerabilities, as we should all know by now. From a single injection, we accessed EVERYTHING. Why do you put such faith in a company that allows itself to become open to these simple attacks?”
This sounds like a broken record… Passwords and sensitive user details stored in plain text… Attackers using “a very simple SQL injection” to compromise a major media conglomerate.
Worst of all the hackers are exposing over a million people to having their accounts compromised and identities stolen simply to make a political point.
Sony passwords leakedThe take away for the average internet users is clear. Don’t trust that your password is being securely stored and be sure to use a unique password for every website to limit your exposure if hacks like these occur.
I took a brief look at some of the information disclosed and many passwords used were things like “faithful”, “hockey”, “123456″, “freddie”, “123qaz” and “michael”.
Companies collecting information from their customers have a duty to protect that information as well.
In addition to employing proper encryption to protect against theft or loss, companies should work with reputable penetration testers to validate their security plans.
Interested in some practical help with data security? Download our Data Security Toolkit.
Interested in encrypting your own personal files? Try out Sophos Free Encryption.

Is Twitter Killing Off Third-Party Services?

 


Twitter’s announcement of its own photo-sharing service puts quite a few third-party photo-sharing services in a bind.
Apps such as Twitpic, Twitgoo and Yfrog have long been employed by users wishing to show images to their Twitter followers. In fact, Twitter even started supporting in-stream photo viewing with the revamping of Twitter.com.
But with Twitter’s soon-to-roll-out service, which will allow users to upload photos directly to Twitter via the official web and mobile apps, third-party services are being cut out of the picture.
A Twitter rep said in an email to Mashable, “We’re still supporting other third-party photo services in our mobile and desktop clients, so users can choose the one that works best for them.”
Although Twitter isn’t immediately revoking API access or support for these apps, it is entering into an entirely new field of competition. And the Twitpic and Yfrog devs certainly didn’t expect they’d be competing with Twitter.
We spoke with Twitpic founder Noah Everett Wednesday via email. “We had no idea Twitter was building a photo feature. Communication between developers and Twitter has never been very clear and the relationships between Twitter and its developers has changed a lot since the Chirp conference last year,” he said. “A more clear feature roadmap and better communication would have been much appreciated by all their developers.”

Twitter’s Turning Point


Everett refers to a turning point in the Twitter/third-party dev relationship about a year ago. Until spring 2010, Twitter apps built with Twitter APIs had been allowed to flourish with little interference and no competition from Twitter.
But at Chirp, the company’s first developer conference, Twitter announced it had acquired Tweetie, a popular iPhone client from dev shop Atebits. Before then, no one thought Twitter was going to develop an official mobile client, and an entire ecosystem of third-party Twitter mobile apps had sprung up.
With the Tweetie announcement, Twitter effectively crushed the futures of quite a few startups and mobile dev shops. The company had allowed and encouraged the development of these mobile apps, and it was now in direct competition with them.
In more recent announcements about the API’s use in building Twitter clients and the subsequent acquisition of TweetDeck, Twitter is taking a similar position in the ecosystem of Twitter desktop clients and dashboards. (In fact, some point to the Twitter.com redesign itself as an attack on desktop clients.)
And today, we’re seeing the same story being played out with photo-sharing apps.

Whose Business Is It, Anyway?


Of course, it’s Twitter’s prerogative to build user-requested features in-house rather than letting third-party apps capture all that traffic. The company’s API isn’t a public utility, and no one but Twitter actually has the right, in the legal sense, to use it.
None of the third-party devs would deny that Twitter needs to make money on its own product. What they do resent is the poor communication between the company and outside devs.
For example, early in the history of the company’s API, co-founder Biz Stone said, “The API has been arguably the most important, or maybe even inarguably, the most important thing we’ve done with Twitter. It has allowed us, first of all, to keep the service very simple and create a simple API so that developers can build on top of our infrastructure and come up with ideas that are way better than our ideas.”
However, every time third-party devs come up with an overwhelmingly popular feature, Twitter has swooped in and quickly dominated the space, putting indie devs out of business. And image-sharing is without doubt hugely popular. Twitpic.com alone gets around 10% of the traffic seen on Twitter.com, according to three traffic-reporting sites.
Ever since the turning point at Chirp, investing one’s time, effort and capital into a Twitter app has been a risky proposition, and as Twitter continues to encroach on the domain of third-party services, the opportunity for building a sustainable Twitter app becomes narrower and less certain.

Can Third-Party Apps Survive?


Just as Seesmic founder Loic Le Meur once told the anti-Twitter complainers at Chirp to [redacted] themselves, Everett is sticking to a staunchly optimistic line when it comes to Twitpic’s future.
While he admits he is “not sure what strategy we will be taking with Twitpic currently,” he does say, “We believe that Twitpic will live on. We’ve built an extremely powerful, worldwide brand, and we own that brand … regardless of this feature announcement from Twitter.”
But in fact, the fate of Twitpic, Yfrog and other third-party photo-sharing services remains uncertain. (Twitgoo’s predicament is unique, since that brand is under the Photobucket umbrella, and Photobucket is hosting Twitter’s official photo-sharing feature.)
At any rate, this latest development will certainly serve as further discouragement to any developer (or investor) with an eye on the Twitter ecosystem outside Twitter itself.

What should be included in next-generation video game systems

What should be included in next-generation video game systems


TAMPA – E3 2011 is fast approaching, and the big three console makers are expected to announce their plans for their future systems.
Nintendo has already announced development on its next console, at this point code named “Project Cafe.”
Sony’s upcoming handheld, the NGP, is the powerful successor to the the PlayStation Portable, which came to American store shelves in 2005.
Microsoft is the wild card, with rumors swirling that big time game makers already have development kits for their unnanounced Xbox 360 follow-up.
With all that in mind, here’s a look at what each company needs to put in their machines to catch the consumer’s eye – and get the money out of their wallet.
Nintendo’s Project Cafe:
1) The Nintendo Wii changed the way we play with its revolutionary motion controls and reintroduced video gaming to a generation that grew up with Mario and Zelda. The wand controller became second nature for the 80 million-plus that have enjoyed the Wii, and Nintendo needs to keep something similar in their next system. Changing back to a more modern version, with dual joysticks and multiple buttons and triggers, might alienate the crowd that snatched up the Wii.
2) The Wii was mocked by many hardcore gamers as an underpowered, unimpressive, weak system. Its graphics were marginally above those produced by the Gamecube, and as the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 dazzled a new generation with high definition visuals and surround sound, the Wii got left in the dust. The new system must be capable of 1080p graphics and digital surround sound. HDMI is also a must, and with 3D technology becoming more and more popular, that feature has to be considered as well. The Wii doesn’t even play DVDs, an absolute requirement for the next system.
3) Nintendo has always cranked out top hits with their own reliable stars: Mario, Link, Samus, Pokemon, and many more. It’s the third party developers that have been unkind over the years, often designing their smash hits like Call of Duty and Madden for the top-notch consoles and dumbing them down for the Wii. This leads to barebones versions of top titles that don’t sell nearly as well. Nintendo needs to build friendships with EA and Activision, among others, proving that their console is not a wimp in the next generation and that it’s worth their attention.
4) Playing online with your friends on the Wii is harder than acing the SATs. Individual “friend codes”, randomly generated numbers that must be entered for each game, have alienated many players looking to play with their pals online. Xbox and PS3 gamers can make their own username which applies across all games, and at this point, it’s stunning Nintendo hasn’t caught on. This simple idea is the first step Nintendo has to put in place in order to essentially “build” their online population. Their Virtual Console store, however, has been very popular, selling past games like the original Super Mario Brothers and many Super Nintendo hits as digital downloads for a few bucks each. These purchases need to carry over to the next system.
5) Finally, Nintendo’s systems have been priced lower than the competition nearly every console generation. That needs to stay the case for the next console. If Nintendo can squeeze all of that and more into “Project Cafe”, and keep it under $300, they’ll have another winner on store shelves.
Sony’s NGP:
1) The PSP was a daring first entry into the portable gaming market for Sony. Boasting better graphics and sound than anything Nintendo could offer, tech junkies were dazzled. The 3DS from Nintendo has closed part of the gap, offering glasses-free 3D. Whether the NGP has 3D or not, it needs to keep wowing players with amazing visuals. If early indications hold true, there’s little to worry about.
2) The original PSP ran on proprietary UMD discs, and this was a major drain on the system’s battery. Future design revisions have since eliminated the need for discs, instead storing games on memory sticks or a small built-in hard drive. Still, with the giant touch screen and constant internet connectivity of the NGP, there are concerns that the battery might last just six hours or less. This is unacceptable for players looking for something to do on long flights or vacations, when charging isn’t available. Sony must work on an alternative before launch time.
more on : http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/entertainment/what-should-be-included-in-next-generation-video-game-systems

Rihanna and Hayden Panettiere sex video spreads Mac malware on Facebook

Hot on the heels of an earlier Mac malware attack spreading via Facebook links, we are seeing another attempt to infect Mac users on the social network – with what claims to be a sex video of celebrities Rihanna and Hayden Panettiere.
If you see messages like the following on Facebook, please do not click on the links.
Hot Lesbian Video - Rihanna And Hayden Panettiere!!
one more stolen home porn video ;) Rihanna and Hayden Panettiere
Hot Lesbian Video - Rihanna And Hayden Panettiere!!
[LINK]
Rihanna And Hayden Panettiere !!! Private Lesbian HOT Sex Tape stolen from home archive of Rihanna!
For those who don’t follow such things, Hayden Panettiere played the part of the cheerleader in the sci-fi TV show “Heroes”, and Rihanna is a pop star famous for her umbrella-ella-ella.
Not that you’ll get to see much evidence of that if you click on the link as – on Apple Macs at least – you may find yourself ending up on a webpage which tries to infect you with malware in the form of a fake anti-virus attack.
Fake anti-virus attack on Mac
Has a private lesbian hot sex tape really been stolen from the home archive of Rihanna? Personally I think it’s unlikely, but it’s surprising what people will believe these days (and indeed, what celebrities will get up to) so it’s no wonder that some folks might click on the link.
SophosLabs is adding detection for the various components of this Mac malware attack as OSX/FakeAV-DWK, OSX/FakeAV-DWN, OSX/FakeAvDl-A and OSX/FakeAVZp-C. Users of Sophos products, including the free Mac anti-virus for home users, will be automatically updated.
If you’re on Facebook and want to learn more about spam, malware, scams and other threats, you should join the Sophos Facebook page where we have a thriving community of over 80,000 people.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The Next 6 Months Worth Of Features Are In Facebook’s Code Right Now (But We Can’t See)

A few days ago, Facebook held a tech talk at their headquarters. The topic of the talk was pushing changes — bug fixes, new features, product improvements, etc. Every day, Facebook engineers push hundreds of these; some big, some little. Most of the 600 million-plus users never notice a thing. And apparently, we’re even less likely to notice changes due to a special feature Facebook has. The “Everyone But TechCrunch Can See This” feature.
As Facebook engineer Chuck Rossi details around minute 23:00 in the video, Facebook has a tool they call “Gatekeeper” which allows them to be in control of who can see what code live on the service at any given time. As Rossi points out, right now on Facebook.com there is already the code for every major thingFacebook is going to launch in the next six months and beyond! It’s the Gatekeeper which stops us from seeing it.
And I do mean “us”. While some of the Gatekeeper parameters are obvious — filter by country, age, data center — one is really interesting. “One of my favorite ones is an ‘everyone except people from TechCrunch can see this’,” Rossi says. He’s serious.
What Facebook has done is likely just put all of our personal profiles on a list of people never eligible to see hidden code. Of course, that doesn’t always work. But it’s also the same type of feature that allowed them to “launch” a new faxing service with us, even though no one else could see it. Funny stuff.
We appreciate Facebook’s attention to detail in keeping us out of their code. Of course, now they’re really asking for it. Do they really think you can’t make a fake account on Facebook? Sure… Stay tuned for the next six months of features coming from Facebook…

summer's hottest games

Editor’s note: Scott Steinberg is the head of technology and video game consulting firm TechSavvy Global as well as the founder of GameExec magazine and Game Industry TV. The creator and host of online video series Game Theory, he frequently appears as an on-air technology analyst for ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox and CNN.
(CNN) – Summer is typically a slow time for video games as fans ditch their controllers in favor of sunny seaside vacations or the pleasures of the great outdoors. But this year, a number of high-profile new releases hope to buck that trend.
From the return of notable gaming franchises (“inFamous 2,” “Dungeon Siege III”) to the debut of much-anticipated sequels (“F.E.A.R. III,” “Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition”), expect no shortage of surprises this season.
Better still, a sizable stack of new PC, console, mobile and online amusements, including the weird (“Catherine”), wild (“UFC Personal Trainer”) and outright bizarre (“Michael Phelps: Push the Limit”), are just the beginning.
Players may also get the chance to discover Nintendo’s next Wii video game system, rumored to be packing high-definition graphics, more power than the PlayStation 3 and a touchscreen controller, in June at industry trade show Electronic Entertainment Expo 2011.
Against all odds, fabled “vaporware” title “Duke Nukem: Forever,” in development for more than 14 years and gaming’s equivalent of Guns N’ Roses’ legendarily delayed “Chinese Democracy” album, may actually ship — and by fall, no less.
Between an unexpected comeback for old-school spaceship shooters (“Otomedius Excellent”), the rise of retro-inspired role-playing games (“Hunted: Demon’s Forge”) and three-dimensional updates of classic fighting series (“Dead or Alive: Dimensions”), bombshells abound.
Quickly heating up to be one of the most promising summers of the past decade, here are just a few of the titles you’ve want to keep at the top of your playlist:
Alice: Madness Returns (Electronic Arts, PC/PlayStation 3/Xbox 360) — A twisted take on Lewis Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” story. Expect a wealth of offbeat puzzles and psychedelic landscapes to explore from this sequel to the critically acclaimed 2000 original.
Picking up after the first title ended, Alice (here a mentally disturbed girl whose psychological troubles have created a warped and gonzo netherworld) must fight off quirky enemies while wandering through the surreal alternate reality.
Armed with teapot cannons, hobby horses and wicked-looking knives, familiar faces, including the Mad Hatter and Cheshire Cat, make cameos as you tour a tortured world of warped childhood fantasies and inexplicable chessboard imagery.
Release date: June 14
Child of Eden (UbiSoft, PlayStation 3/Xbox 360) — The music-and-rhythm game genre’s viability has been called into question lately, given MTV’s sale of the “Rock Band” franchise and Activision’s recent benching of the popular “Guitar Hero” series.
But this interactive laser light show, a motion-sensing shooter where you blast scintillating shapes by waving your hand to create musical tones dynamically, hopes to prove there’s life in the genre outside of “Just Dance.”
A spiritual sequel to cult classic “Rez” that’s designed by renowned game maker Tetsuya Mizuguchi (“Lumines”), its kaleidoscopic effects and space-age soundscapes make it as much a club night warm-up as actual digital diversion.
Release date: June 14
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D (Nintendo, Nintendo 3DS) — Hailed as a masterpiece of early 3-D game design, the fantasy role-playing classic has been updated to include 3-D special effects that appear literally to burst from your Nintendo 3DS system’s screen.
If any title can help turn around the glasses-free handheld portable system’s underperforming sales, it’s this enhancement of the timeless 1998 Nintendo 64 smash, renowned for its sophisticated gameplay, storyline and challenges.
In addition to the original game and more-difficult Master Quest, which offers differing dungeon layouts and puzzles to enjoy, freshly added touch controls should make the experience more accessible to newcomers.
Release date: June 19
NCAA Football 2012 (EA Sports, PlayStation3/Xbox 360) — As the virtual collegiate gridiron’s perennial Heisman Trophy winner by default (being the only game in town), the reigning champ of university-level football simulations doesn’t always deliver an MVP performance.
Although it’s more a new iteration than true innovation, this year’s edition, we expect, should go the distance with improved collision detection for more accurate tackles and striking visual upgrades, including better lighting, 3-D grass (no, seriously) and more lifelike players.
Aiming to improve the game’s overall pacing and fluidity while also adding high-tech replicas of authentic school game-day traditions such as Georgia Tech’s Ramblin’ Wreck (Google it), here’s hoping it’s a game-winning effort.
Release date: July 12
Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Square-Enix, PC/PlayStation 3/Xbox 360) — “Blade Runner” fans would do well to check out this open-ended, sci-fi role-player, the latest in a best-selling series praised for the sheer freedom of choice it offers fans.
Set in a bleak, futuristic Renaissance world with an equally gritty and atmospheric storyline, players must use biomechanical implants to gain superhuman abilities that make sneaking past or splattering enemies simpler.
A mature global conspiracy thriller, it doesn’t pull punches, letting you attack scenarios using many tactics from stealth to combat, hacking or puzzle-solving, ensuring that the title never plays the same way twice

Sunday, May 29, 2011

FindFriendz.com, Dating Website Hacked!


Dating Website FindFriendz hacked by an indian hacker, lionaneesh and 45,000 users data got compromised.

Proof:



2nd position, Network systems and data communications analysts inToday’s 20 Fastest-Growing Occupations

For the past two years, as job growth has gone from nonexistent to lackluster, workers and job seekers have been waiting to hear good news. Job seekers on all fronts want good news. Unemployed job seekers need to pay the bills and get back in the work force. Employed job hunters want to get out of dead-end jobs and earn competitive salaries. College students on the verge of graduating are eager to embark on a career and use the education they accumulated over the past four years.
The job seeker situation can be summarized in one word: frustrating.
The economy is recovering, but the recovery is slow. If you’re in need of a new job, it’s too slow. You can’t wait several years until things are back to their pre-recession levels. Fortunately, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has identified 20 jobs that are expected to grow rapidly between now and 2018. These occupations are in high demand now and are expected to continue on this trajectory for the next decade.
Here are the 20 fastest-growing occupations between 2008 and 2018*:
1. Biomedical engineersPercent change: 72 percent
Number of new jobs: 11,600
Annual median salary: $77,400
Why they’re growing: As the population ages, demand for new health-care equipment designed by biomedical engineers will increase.
2. Network systems and data communications analystsPercent change: 53 percent
Number of new jobs: 155,800
Annual median salary: $71,100
Why they’re growing: Companies will continue to upgrade technology (such as networks) and will need to expand their IT workforce.
3. Home health aidesPercent change: 50 percent
Number of new jobs: 460,900
Annual median salary: $20,460
Why they’re growing: As the population gets older and lives longer, home health aides will see a rise in demand.
4. Personal and home care aidesPercent change: 46 percent
Number of new jobs: 375,800
Annual median salary: $19,180
Why they’re growing: The aging population will require more medical attention, often at home rather than in medical facilities.
5. Financial examinersPercent change: 41 percent
Number of new jobs:  11,100
Annual median salary: $70,930
Why they’re growing: Financial institutions are under increasing watch by the government and will continue to be for the next decade, which provides many new opportunities for financial examiners.
6. Medical scientists, except epidemiologistsPercent change: 40 percent
Number of new jobs: 44,200
Annual median salary: $72,590
Why they’re growing: Advances in biotechnology have created new opportunities for medical scientists over the past two decades and are on track to continue.
7. Physician assistantsPercent change: 39 percent
Number of new jobs: 29,200
Annual median salary: $81,230
Why they’re growing: Health-care facilities will use physician assistants to ease some responsibilities from physicians who are being given heavier workloads.
8. Skin care specialistsPercent change: 38 percent
Number of new jobs: 14,700
Annual median salary: $28,730
Why they’re growing: Spas and other cosmetic centers are expanding at a fast pace and skin care specialists are some of their most in-demand employees.
9. Biochemists and biophysicistsPercent change: 37 percent
Number of new jobs: 8,700
Annual median salary: $82,840
Why they’re growing: Continued advances in biotechnology create opportunities for new research and development careers.
10. Athletic trainersPercent change: 37 percent
Number of new jobs: 6,000
Annual median salary: $39,640
Why they’re growing: As Americans focus on preventative health care and organizations support these efforts, athletic trainers will see an increase in responsibilities and job opportunities.
11. Physical therapist aidesPercent change: 36
Number of new jobs: 16,700
Annual median salary: $23,760
Why they’re growing: In general, all physical therapy services will be in higher demand, and the need for aides will rise along with them.
12. Dental hygienistsPercent change: 36 percent
Number of new jobs: 62,900
Annual median salary: $66,570
Why they’re growing: Due to the aging population and an increased emphasis on health care, dental health services will create more opportunities for dental hygienists.
13. Veterinary technologists and techniciansPercent change: 36 percent
Number of new jobs: 28,500
Annual median salary: $28,900
Why they’re growing: The need for technologists and technicians will outpace qualified candidates who are graduating from institutions, creating an increased demand.
14. Dental assistantsPercent change: 36 percent
Number of new jobs: 105,600
Annual median salary: 32,380
Why they’re growing: Due to an aging population and better preventative dental care habits for adults and children, dental assistants will see rapid growth in the coming decade.
15. Computer software engineers, applicationsPercent change: 34 percent
Number of new jobs: 175,100
Annual median salary: $85,430
Why they’re growing: Advances in technology and a continued reliance on computer networks ensure organizations of all industries will need software engineers.
16. Medical assistantsPercent change: 34 percent
Number of new jobs: 163,900
Annual median salary: $28,300
Why they’re growing: Medical assistants will increasingly assume some health-care provider roles in order to alleviate the increasing demands of physicians.
17. Physical therapist assistantsPercent change: 33 percent
Number of new jobs: 21,200
Annual median salary: $46,140
Why they’re growing: As the population ages, many people will turn to physical therapy for an increased quality of life.
18. VeterinariansPercent change: 33 percent
Number of new jobs: 19,700
Annual median salary: $79,050
Why they’re growing: Pet owners are willing to spend more money for the health and well being of their pets, thereby putting veterinarians in high demand.
19. Self-enrichment education teachersPercent change: 32 percent
Number of new jobs: 81,300
Annual median salary: 35,720
Why they’re growing: The types of coursework offered in this field are expected to broaden and create new positions for teachers.
20. Compliance officers, except agriculture, construction, health and safety, and transportationPercent change: 31 percent
Number of new jobs: 80,800
Annual median salary: $48,890
Why they’re growing: Compliance officers are one of the fastest growing occupations due to tighter restrictions and more scrutiny on financial institutions.
*Growth rates and salary information for all occupations based on data from the BLS.

The top 50 passwords you should never use

Are you one of the many people who is using a dangerously easy-to-guess password?
Maybe now’s the time to fix that before it’s too late.
Twitter, LinkedIn, World of Warcraft and Yahoo are amongst the popular websites which are advising users to change their passwords in light of the recent security breach at the Gawker Media family of sites.
The issue is that many people (33% in our research) use the same password on every single website. That means that if your password gets stolen in one place (like Gawker’s Gizmodo or Lifehacker websites), it can be used to unlock access to other sites too.
Unfortunately, an analysis of the passwords stolen in the Gawker incident show that many people are choosing very poor passwords, that are easy for intruders to guess:
Top 50 passwords
Disturbing isn’t it? Too many of us are choosing risible passwords – and trust me, the hackers know about the most commonly chosen passwords and are quick to try them out when trying to break into your accounts. Malware like the infamous Conficker worm have even had lists of commonly-used passwordsbuilt into them – and have used them to try to spread further.
So, clearly people need to get out of the habit of using the same password everywhere, and they also need to ensure that their passwords are not easy to guess or crack.
But another thought springs to my mind. Why don’t more websites test the password that you’ve chosen to ensure that it’s strong enough?
It would be fairly simple, for instance, when a new user creates an account for the website to run the password they submit against a database of commonly used passwords and a dictionary. If the password you offer is a dictionary word, or is too easy to crack then it should be rejected by the website.
If websites simply tell users to change their passwords after the Gawker incident what’s to stop folks changing their “123456″ password to the just as bad “password” password?
We need to not just drum into users heads about the importance of password safety, but also police submitted passwords better to ensure weak ones *can’t* easily be chosen

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

news abot osama bin laden

In this Dec. 24, 1998 file photo, al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden speaks to a selected group of reporters in mountains of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan.CBS News was told that the courier was "trusted" by bin Laden. "We identified areas where this courier and his brother operated, but they had extensive operational security," said the official -- and those elaborate security procedures made the U.S. even more suspicious of whom they were catering to.


Four years ago, the United States learned the man's identity, which officials did not disclose, and then about two years later, they identified areas of Pakistan where he operated. Last August, the man's residence was found, officials said.

The residence is in Abbotabad, Pakistan, an affluent area with lots of retired military. The compound was surrounded by an 8-foot wall with barbed wire. There were extra walls inside and 2 security gates. Also telling was that they burned trash, unlike their neighbors. There was a terrace on the 3rd floor with a 7-foot privacy wall. It was a million-dollar home with no telephone or internet connections, custom built to hide someone of significance. Another major indicator was that a family lived there, one whose size and make up was same as bin Ladens.

By mid-February, intelligence from multiple sources was clear enough that Mr. Obama wanted to "pursue an aggressive course of action," a senior administration official said.

The president spent part of his Sunday on the golf course, but cut his round short to return to the White House for a meeting where he and top national security aides reviewed final preparations for the raid.

Abbottabad Pakistan Two hours later, Mr. Obama was told that bin Laden had been tentatively identified.

CIA director Leon Panetta was directly in charge of the military team during the operation, according to one official, and when he and his aides received word at agency headquarters that bin Laden had been killed, cheers broke out around the conference room table.

Administration aides said the operation was so secretive that no foreign officials were informed in advance, and only a small circle inside the U.S. government was aware of what was unfolding half a world away.

In his announcement, Mr. Obama said he had called Pakistani President Zardari after the raid, and said it was "important to note that our counter-terrorism cooperation with Pakistan helped lead us to bin Laden and the compound where he was hiding."

One senior administration told reporters, though, "we were very concerned ... that he was inside Pakistan, but this is something we're going to continue to work with the Pakistani government on."

The compound is about 100 yards from a Pakistani military academy, in a city that is home to three army regiments and thousands of military personnel. Abbottabad is surrounded by hills and with mountains in the distance.

Critics have long accused elements of Pakistan's security establishment of protecting bin Laden, though Islamabad has always denied it, and in a statement the foreign ministry said his death showed the country's resolve in the battle against terrorism.


Whatever the global repercussions, bin Laden's death marked the end to a manhunt that consumed most of a decade that began in the grim hours after bin Laden's hijackers flew planes into the World Trade Center twin towers in Manhattan and the Pentagon across the Potomac River from Washington. A fourth plane was commandeered by passengers who overcame the hijackers and forced the plane to crash in the Pennsylvania countryside.


In all, nearly 3,000 were killed in the worst terror attacks on American soil.

Bin Laden's capture sent crowds outside of the White House, in Times Square and at West Point into spontaneous celebrations.

"We've been waiting a long time for this day," Lisa Ramaci, a New Yorker whose husband was a freelance journalist killed in the Iraq war, said early Monday. "I think it's a relief for New York tonight just in the sense that we had this 10 years of frustration just building and building, wanting this guy dead, and now he is, and you can see how happy people are."

She was holding a flag and wearing a T-shirt depicting the twin towers and, in crosshairs, bin Laden. Nearby, a man held up a cardboard sign that read, "Obama 1, Osama 0."

Uptown in Times Square, dozens stood together on a clear spring night and broke into applause when a New York Fire Department SUV drove by, flashed its lights and sounded its siren. A man held an American flag, and others sang "The Star-Spangled Banner."

In Washington, in front of the White House, a crowd began gathering Mr. Obama addressed the nation. The throng grew, and within a half-hour had filled the street in front of the White House and begun spilling into Lafayette Park.

"It's not over, but it's one battle that's been won, and it's a big one," said Marlene English, who lives in Arlington, Va., and lobbies on defense issues. She said she has baked thousands of cookies to send to friends serving in Iraq and Afghanistan over the years and that she was at the White House because they couldn't be.

Families of 9/11 victims also spoke out with satisfaction.

"This is important news for us, and for the world. It cannot ease our pain, or bring back our loved ones. It does bring a measure of comfort that the mastermind of the September 11th tragedy and the face of global terror can no longer spread his evil," Gordon Felt, president of the Families of Flight 93, said in a statement.

Former President George W. Bush, who was in office on the day of the attacks, issued a written statement hailing bin Laden's death as a momentous achievement. "The fight against terror goes on, but tonight America has sent an unmistakable message: No matter how long it takes, justice will be done," he said.

Friday, April 29, 2011

<a href="http://www.hypersmash.com">Hypersmash</a>

world war 2

                            world war 2

WW1 had nothing to do with WW2 hitler was the person who staryed ww2 by invading poland 20 after the Treaty

the Real cause of WW2 was the peoole that Put Hitler in power and then in 1933 Built his war Machine

here is a short list of the people that financed the NAZIS up to 1945 remember no hitler No WW2

the Bulk of NAZI germanys Funding came From these American Owned Companies from 1924

in 1933 Warburg loaned the German Olympic committee 60,000 Gold marks

ITT owned Factory of Fokker Wolf

The Biggest donations were sent Via I G Farben who was owned By standard/ Vacuum Oil which in turn was Owned By Prescott Bush and the Rockefeller's

In 1933 Prescott Bush Rockefeller and FDR loaned Hitler the Money that put him in power when he won the elections

On Hitler's birthday in 1939, the Ford Company in germany sent him a gift of 50,000 Marks as a token of its loyalty.

Ford is actually the only American that Hitler even mentions in his book Mein Kampf.

By 1941, the Ford Werke plant became one of the largest suppliers of military vehicles to the German Army.

the Grand Cross of the German Eagle was presented to these Americans from Hitler

James Mooney, the General Motors executive in charge of European operations also received award. Coincidentally, his firm had also invested very heavily in Germany. In 1929, General Motors had bought up 80% of the German automobile firm of Opel.

The same award was presented by Herman Göring to the wildly popular (and coincidentally, very wealthy, and highly politically 'connected') American aviation hero, Charles Lindbergh, in October, 1938

similar awards to

Thomas J. Watson, chairman of IBM, 1937. Watson was also president of the International Chamber of Commerce in 1937;

Henry Ford was awarded the Grand Cross of the German Eagle on his 75th birthday, 30 July 1938.

General Olof Thörnell, Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces, was awarded the Grand Cross of the German Eagle 7 October 1940. so much for Neutrality

Charles Lindbergh was awarded the Order of the German Eagle with Star 19 October 1938.

SKF ignored the request to stop selling to Germany in 1943 because they were making to Much money

here are a few that contributed up to and including 1945

SKF of Philadelphia worlds Largest Ball bearing Manufacturer sold 600,000 units a year to order from 1933 to 1945

Standard Oil refuelling U Boats caught by the US coast Guard in 1943

IG Farben Owned By standard oil which was owned By prescott Bush and the Rockefeller's

Du Pont who were also working with the Manhattan Project

IBM helped with the Holocaust

Coco Cola they developed Fanta in Germany

Ford

Opel in Germany owned and controlled fully by GM

Chrysler

Westrick,

Texaco

Standard Gas & Electric

The International Harvester Company

Herman Metz, a director of the Bank of Manhattan, controlled by the Warburgs.

the Rockefeller Chase Bank remained Open in Paris up to 1944 doing Business with the Nazis

Moreover, American assistance to Nazi war efforts extended into other areas.

The largest tank producers in Hitler's Germany were General Motors (controlled by the J.P. Morgan firm),Opel a wholly owned subsidiary of Ford built his Trucks up to and including 1945

the Ford A. G. subsidiary of the Ford Motor Company of Detroit. The Nazis granted tax-exempt status to Opel in 1936, to enable General Motors to expand its production facilities.

General Motors obligingly reinvested the resulting profits into German industry.

Henry Ford was decorated by the Nazis for his services to Nazism. with the "Grand cross of the German Eagle" which was never handed Back

Alcoa and Dow Chemical worked closely with Nazi industry with numerous transfers of their domestic U.S. technology. Bendix Aviation, in which the J.P. Morgan-controlled General Motors firm had a major stock interest, supplied Siemens & Halske A. G. in Germany with data on automatic pilots and aircraft instruments. As late as 1940, in the "unofficial war," Bendix Aviation supplied complete technical data to Robert Bosch for aircraft and diesel engine starters and received royalty payments in return.

yes corporate USA and Wall St used hitler to start WW2 in the Hope that he would Defeat the Communists and 72 million died just so the USA could make Money

the second link is the most Disturbing as they are Still in Business as is the company that designed the pretty SS uniforms using slave labour Hugo Bos

At the end of the war, millions of refugees were homeless, the European economy had collapsed, and most of the European industrial infrastructure was destroyed.

Border revisions and population transfersMain articles: Iron Curtain, Expulsion of Germans after World War II, Oder-Neisse line, and Occupation of the Baltic states
As a result of the new borders drawn by the victorious nations, large populations suddenly found themselves in hostile territory.

The main beneficiary of these revisions was the Soviet Union, which expanded its borders at the expense of Germany, Finland, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Japan. The Soviet Union also acquired the three independent states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which had declared their neutrality before the outbreak of World War II. The Baltic states were occupied and annexed early in the war in agreement with the Nazis via the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, then re-conquered in 1944. The Soviet Union also attempted to establish a separate government in that portion of Iran it had controlled during the war.

A minor temporary beneficiary was France, which in 1947 annexed the German state of Saar as a nominally independent protectorate under French economic control. Poland was compensated for its losses to the Soviet Union by most of Germany east. In total, Germany lost roughly a quarter of its territory.

Numerous Germans were expelled, mostly from the ceded German territories and from the Sudetenland. Many died, and historians debate to this day the death rate. Several hundreds of thousands of Poles, and Japanese were also expelled.

ReparationsThe eastern victors demanded payment of war reparations from the defeated nations, and in the Paris Peace Treaty, the Soviet Union's enemies—Hungary, Finland and Romania—were required to pay $300,000,000 each to the Soviet Union. Italy was required to pay $360,000,000, shared chiefly between Greece, Yugoslavia, and the Soviet Union. The much larger reparations from occupied Germany to Russia were to be paid not by goods or money but by the transfer of capital goods, such as dismantled manufacturing plants. A separate Reparations to the western victors consisted mainly of free coal deliveries as well as of machinery and dismantled factories, of which the majority went to France, with some going to Britain. Germany and Italy also paid in the form of POW-provided forced labor; 100,000 in Britain and 700,000 in France. The U.S settled for appropriating German patents as well as all German company assets in the U.S. The "intellectual reparations", such as patents and blueprints, taken by the U.S. and the UK amounted to close to $10 billion, equivalent of around $100 billion in 2006 terms.The program of also acquiring German scientists and technicians for the U.S. was also used to deny the expertise of German scientists to the Soviet Union.

The U.S. eventually stopped the shipment of dismantled factories from the U.S. zone of occupation east because of increasing friction with Russia, part of which was caused by Russian refusal to provide the western occupation zones with surplus food from the eastern occupation zone which had been the breadbasket of Germany. Western Allied dismantling of industry in the Saar area and Ruhr area was virtually completed by 1950.

Plans for GermanyThe initial plans proposed by the United States were harsh. The Morgenthau Plan of 1944 called for stripping Germany of the industrial resources required for war. The main industrial areas of the Ruhr and Silesia were to be removed from Germany, as were Germany's main sources of coal and iron, namely Saar and the German speaking parts of Alsace-Lorraine, which were to be once again under French occupation.


German occupation zones in 1946 after territorial annexationsWhile the Morgenthau Plan was never implemented in its original form, it did end up greatly influencing events. Most notable was this influence seen through its toned-down offshoots. Examples of these are the Potsdam Conference, Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067, and the industrial plans for Germany.

In occupied Germany, the Morgenthau plan lived on in the U.S. occupation directive JCS 1067 and in the Allied "industrial disarmament" plans, designed to reduce German economic might and to destroy Germany's capability to wage war by complete or partial de-industrialization and restrictions imposed on utilization of remaining production population. The first industrial plan for Germany, signed in 1946, required the destruction of 1,500 manufacturing plants. The purpose of this was to lower German heavy industry output to roughly 50% of its 1938 level. By 1950, after the virtual completion of the by then much watered-out "level of industry" plans, equipment had been removed from 706 manufacturing plants, and steel production capacity had been reduced by 6,700,000 tons.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067 (JCS 1067), which governed U.S. policy in Germany from April 1945 until July 1947, stated that no help was to be given to the Germans in rebuilding their nation, save for the minimum required to mitigate starvation.

These policies were however to some degree counteracted by the military governor of the U.S. zone in Germany, General Lucius D. Clay, who did his best to use whatever loopholes the directives allowed for, particularly for actions that would reduce “unrest” and “famine“. This slowed down the rate factories were being destroyed and increased the food rations to 1,500 calories per day (half the normal UK rations).


The September 1944 U.S. (Morgenthau) Plan for the partitioning of Germany.The problems brought on by these types of policies became apparent to many after a year of occupation. Germany had long been the industrial giant of Europe, and its poverty held back the general European recovery. The continued scarcity in Germany also led to considerable expenses for the occupying powers, which were obligated to try to make up the most important shortfalls.

The Western powers' worst fear was that the poverty and hunger would drive the Germans to communism. General Clay stated "There is no choice between being a communist on 1,500 calories a day and a believer in democracy on a thousand".

After lobbying by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Generals Clay and George Marshall, the Truman administration finally realized that economic recovery in Europe could not go forward without the reconstruction of the German industrial base on which it had previously had been dependent.In July 1947, President Truman rescinded on "national security grounds"the punitive JCS 1067, which had directed the U.S. forces of occupation in Germany to "take no steps looking toward the economic rehabilitation of Germany." It was replaced by JCS 1779, which instead stressed that "[a]n orderly, prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."

Marshall PlanIn view of the continued poverty and famine in Europe, and with the onset of the Cold War that made it important to bring as much of Germany as possible into the western camp, it became apparent that a change of policy was required. The most notable example of this change was a plan established by United States Secretary of State George Marshall, the "European Recovery Program", better known as the Marshall Plan, which called for the U.S. Congress to allocate billions of dollars for the reconstruction of Europe. Also as part of the effort to rebuild global capitalism and spur post-war reconstruction, the Bretton Woods system was put into effect after the war.

For western Germany, the psychological impact of the Marshall Plan was large. In monetary terms, Germany received only half of what Britain received; in addition, Germany was eventually forced to repay the majority of the money. But it meant that the occupation policy was officially changed, and thus the West German people finally could start rebuilding their new nation. The East German population were not included, and their attempt to revolt against the Russians a few years later was quickly put down.

In the Netherlands the Bakker-Schut Plan to demand a huge monetary compensation and even to annex a part of Germany that would have doubled the country's size was dropped. But many Germans living in the Netherlands were declared 'hostile subjects' and put into a concentration camp in an operation called Black Tulip. A total of 3,691 Germans were ultimately deported.

Closely related was the Monnet Plan of French bureaucrat Jean Monnet that proposed giving France control over the German coal areas of the Ruhr and Saar and using these resources to bring France to 150% of prewar industrial production.

End of European ImperialismThe destruction of Europe and the destruction of a significant portion of the United Kingdom's cities (via aerial bombing) would also ruin the reputation of the imperial nations in the eyes of their colonies. Coupled with the enormous expense incurred in the war, an empire was perceived to be an unnecessarily expensive possession. Thus this would provoke the rapid decolonization process that would see the empires of the United Kingdom and others swept away.

These tendencies helped India and Pakistan become independent from the British Empire in August 1947. Soon Malaysia and other South East Asian colonies also became independent. The Netherlands lost Dutch East Indies, and France lost Indochina. In just a few decades, most Asian and African colonies were independent.

SuperpowersThe immense destruction wrought over the course of the war caused a sharp decline in the influence of the great powers. After the war, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the United States both became formidable forces. The U.S. suffered very little during the war and because of military and industrial exports became a formidable manufacturing power. This led to a period of wealth and prosperity for the U.S. in the fields of industry, agriculture and technology.

While the homeland of the United States was untouched by the war, quite the opposite was true in the Soviet Union. At the height of the Axis advance in 1941, the Wehrmacht got within 20 kilometers (12.5 mi) of Moscow. Although the Nazis were pushed back from Moscow by Soviet winter counter thrusts in early 1942, the Wehrmacht's Operation Blue in summer 1942 pushed Russian forces northeast of the Black Sea to Stalingrad and southeast of the Black Sea to the approaches to Grozny at the foot of the Caucasus Mountains. Therefore the Germans controlled all of Soviet territory west of Leningrad, Moscow, and Stalingrad, from the Baltic Sea to the Caucasus. During the initial German invasion, Operation Barbarossa, the use of scorched earth tactics by both sides left the western portion of the Soviet Union almost totally destroyed. Agricultural land was burned, livestock exterminated, infrastructure dismantled or destroyed and entire towns flattened. All of this land was part of more battles as the Red Army swept west in 1943-1944. Although the Soviets were able to salvage some heavy industry and ship it to safer areas around the Ural Mountains, much of the USSR's pre-war industry fell into the hands of the Germans.

The Soviet Union also suffered unprecedented casualties. From 1941 to 1945 the Red Army lost over 10 million killed and more than 18 million wounded. Civilian losses were also immense; most estimates range from 14 to 17 million civilians killed. Most civilians in the occupied lands in the western USSR were either shot or left to starve or freeze to death by the Germans. Additionally, the majority of Holocaust victims, as well as the perpetration of the Holocaust, were from the Eastern Front. The total deaths resulting from the war amounted to roughly fourteen percent of the USSR's and sixteen percent of Poland's total pre-war population. By comparison, the United States lost about 0.3% of its total pre-war population.[citation needed]

Because of the immense loss of life and the destruction of land and industrial capacity, the USSR was at an economic and (because of the American use of atomic weapons on Japan) strategic disadvantage relative to the United States. The USSR was, however, in a better economic and strategic position than any other continental European power. By the end of the war in 1945 the Red Army was very large, battle-tested and occupied all of Eastern and Central Europe as well as what was to become East Germany. In areas they occupied, the Red Army installed governments they felt would be friendly towards the USSR. Given the tremendous suffering of the Soviet people during the war, Soviet leadership wanted a "buffer zone" of friendly governments between Russia and Western European nations.

Political effectsEuropean UnionThe European Union grew out of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), which was founded in 1951 by the six founding members: Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg (the Benelux countries) and West Germany, France and Italy. Its purpose was to pool the steel and coal resources of the member states, and to support the economies of the participating countries. As a side effect, the ECSC helped defuse tensions between countries which had recently been enemies in the war. In time this economic merger grew, adding members and broadening in scope, to become the European Economic Community, and later the European Union.


The headquarters of the United Nations, located in New York City. The United Nations was founded as a direct result of World War II.United NationsMain article: United Nations
Because the League of Nations had failed to actively prevent the war, in 1945 a new international alliance was considered and then created, the United Nations (UN). The UN also was responsible for the initial recognition of the establishment of the modern state of Israel in 1948, in part as a response to the Holocaust.

The UN operates within the parameters of the United Nations Charter, and the reason for the UN’s formation is outlined in the Preamble to the United Nations Charter. Unlike its predecessor, the United Nations has taken a more active role in the world, such as fighting diseases and providing humanitarian aid to nations in distress. The UN also served as the diplomatic front line during the Cold War. The biggest advantage the United Nations has over the League of Nations is the presence of world superpowers such as the United States and Russia, for the League had little actual international power because of the absence of these nations.

Cold WarMain article: Cold War

The now-defunct Berlin Wall, a symbol of the Cold War.The end of World War II is seen by many as marking the end of the United Kingdom's position as a global superpower and the catalyst for the emergence of the United States and the Soviet Union as the dominant powers in the world. Friction had been building up between the two before the end of the war, and with the collapse of Nazi Germany relations spiraled downward.

In the areas occupied by Western Allied troops, pre-war governments were re-established or new democratic governments were created; in the areas occupied by Soviet troops, including the territories of former Allies such as Poland, communist states were created. These became satellites of the Soviet Union.

Germany was partitioned into four zones of occupation. The American, British and French zones were grouped a few years later into West Germany and the Soviet zone became East Germany. Austria was once again separated from Germany and it, too, was divided into four zones of occupation, which eventually reunited and became the republic of Austria. The partitions were initially informal, but as the relationship between the victors deteriorated, the military lines of demarcation became the de facto country boundaries. The Cold War had begun, and soon two blocs emerged: NATO and the Warsaw Pact.

The partitioning of Europe and Germany and Berlin persisted until the crumbling of the Eastern Bloc in 1989/1990. The Berlin Wall fell on 9 November 1989.

TechnologyThe massive research and development involved in the Manhattan Project in order to quickly achieve a working nuclear weapon design greatly impacted the scientific community, among other things creating a network of national laboratories in the United States. In addition, the pressing for numerous calculations for various things like codebreaking (Colossus) and ballistics tables kick-started the development of electronic computer technology.

Social effectsMain articles: Red Army atrocities, War children, and Female roles in the World Wars
One of the social effects which affected almost all participants to a certain degree was the increased participation of women in the workforce (where they took the place of many men during the war years), though this was somewhat reduced in the decades following the war, as changing society forced many to return to home and family.

According to historian Antony Beevor, amongst others, in his book Berlin - The Downfall 1945 the advancing Red Army had left a massive trail of raped women and girls of all ages behind them. Between several tens of thousands to more than 2,000,000 were victims of rape, often repeatedly. This continued for several years. As a result of this trauma East German women's attitude towards sex was affected for a long time, and it caused social problems between men and women. Russian authorities dispute the event.

The German soldiers left many war children behind in nations such as France and Denmark, which were occupied for an extended period. After the war, the children and their mothers often suffered recriminations. The situation was worst in Norway, where the “Tyskerunger“ (German-kids) suffered greatly. However, today that factor is not present in Norway.s

The casualties experienced by the combatant nations impacted the demographic profile of the post war populations. One study[9] found that the male to female sex ratio in the German state of Bavaria fell as low as 60% for the most severely affected age cohort (those between 21 and 23 years old in 1946). This same study found that out-of-wedlock births spiked from approximately 10-15% during the inter-war years up to 22% at the end of the war. This increase in out-of-wedlock births was attributed to a change in the marriage market caused by the decline in the sex-ratio.

Military effects
World War II produced many technologies that would revolutionize warfare, such as the Messerschmitt Me 262.In the military sphere, World War II marked the coming of age of airpower. Advanced aircraft and guided missiles (developed late in the war) made the battleship, once the queen of the world's oceans, and fixed fortifications such as coastal artillery obsolete. While the pendulum continues to swing in this never-ending competition, air powers are now a full partner in any military action.

The war was the high-water mark for mass armies. While huge conscript armies were seen again (during the Korean War and in several African conflicts), after this victory the major powers relied upon small highly-trained and well-equipped militaries.

Perhaps most important of all, World War II ushered in the nuclear era, with the dropping of the first atomic bombs on the Japanese of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

Trials for war crimesAfter the war, many high-ranking Germans were hanged for war crimes, as well as the mass murder of the Jews in the Holocaust committed mainly on the area of General Government, in the Nuremberg trials. Similarly Japanese leaders were prosecuted in the Tokyo War Crime Trial. Although the deliberate targeting of civilians was already defined as a war crime and it had been used extensively by both sides, most notably in Poland, Britain, Germany and Japan, those responsible were never tried for it. In other countries, notably in Finland, the Allies demanded the political leadership to be prosecuted in “war-responsibility trials.”

Defeat of JapanThe defeat of Japan, and its occupation by Allied Forces, led to a westernization of Japan that was more far-reaching than might otherwise have occurred. Japan quickly modernized into a strong, western-style market and industrial economy, a boom that was to continue well into the 1990s and 2000s.

World War Two was a war of many sides.  It was a war that no one really one, for many lives were lost.  Many families mourned the deaths of their loved ones. And everyone was changed.