Showing 31-37 of 37 results
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Many perils for online love seekers
AFP, Published on 14/02/2015
» WASHINGTON - Advice for people seeking love on the Internet for Valentine's Day: keep looking, but watch for scams and other risks.
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Cyber thugs taking data hostage
AFP, Published on 26/02/2015
» SAN FRANCISCO - Marriage therapist Valerie Goss turned on her computer one day and found that all of her data was being held hostage.
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When friends show their true colours
Spectrum, Post Reporters, Published on 29/12/2013
» After seven years of living together, Ying suddenly feels as though she doesn't know her boyfriend. The polite and quiet guy she loved attended one political rally and seemed to change overnight, posting angry and expletive-strewn comments on Facebook _ even on her page under a different name. Since they fought over politics, they haven't spoken for two weeks.
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Myanmar's revolution will be digitised
Spectrum, Nanchanok Wongsamuth, Published on 22/09/2013
» Twenty-four years ago it was difficult to buy a book in Yangon unless the street vendors selling political publications were familiar with your face and your preferred reading material.
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Hackers eager to exploit 'black holes' in Thai cyberspace security
Spectrum, Published on 19/05/2013
» The recent hacking of the prime minister's website set off alarm bells among the government's security watchdogs, but there are hundreds of well-trained hackers lurking in cyberspace ready to strike ill-prepared local networks.
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'Alif the unseen': A Cross-Cultural harry potter for the web set
Spectrum, Published on 15/07/2012
» In an unnamed emirate in the Persian Gulf there lives a young man with Harry Potter potential. He calls himself Alif, for the letter in the Arabic alphabet, but that's not his real name. It's the internet moniker he uses for his work as a hacker, protecting his clients from censors and the secret police. Alif is uncannily good at this. He's not a boy wizard like Harry, but he works magic just the same.
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Bringing hearts and Seoul to Thailand
Spectrum, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 26/02/2012
» When 54 South Korean teachers arrived in Thailand on Sept 28 last year, their culture shock was compounded by the flooding disaster under way then. Many of the teachers, here on a government sponsored exchange programme, saw their classes postponed and some were left to wonder just what they were doing here. Called "volunteer" teachers by the Thai government, they are in fact paid instructors on wages equivalent to those of Thai junior teachers _ around 10,000 baht a month.
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