BMW Closes Security Loophole To Prevent Unwanted Vehicle Break-Ins

bmw i3The modern day vehicle is chock full of electronics, so much so that their maintenance would require careful calibration as well as specialized equipment – which translates to a higher cost in the long run. Well, vehicles have also gotten “smarter” thanks to the kind of algorithms and systems that they have, and in the case of Tesla, a firmware update – changes in code, essentially, has resulted in a performance boost, now how about that? If one were to look at the flipside, such code could have flaws – and in the case of BMW, a security flaw did exist that made 22 million of its vehicles a potential candidate for break-ins.

Thankfully, this particular security loophole has already been fixed, which means that the German automaker’s BMW, Mini and Rolls Royce models which come equipped with its ConnectedDrive technology will no longer be vulnerable to being exploited. It was German automobile club ADAC that picked up this flaw last summer, and claimed that hackers could very well use a fake cellphone base station in order to intercept network traffic from the car, before lowering the windows or opening the doors. While this is all in theory, there has been no officially reported case of such a break-in ever happening. BMW spokeswoman Silke Brigl did mention that hackers would not have the ability to start or stop the engine, either.

Well, better late than never, right?

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Verizon Wireless will let you dodge those sketchy 'supercookies'

Living a wholly private life on the internet is getting to be impossible, but months of thinkpieces and public outcry finally seem to have done a little good where one company is concerned. According to the New York Times, Verizon Wireless is giving …

Toyota looks beyond bigger batteries for EV range boost

20150129_01_01_sElectric and hybrid cars may be waiting on improved battery technology to squash driver range anxiety, but Toyota believes it may have a wildcard in the meantime. The company is rolling out two new prototypes for real-world testing in Japan, each switching in new silicon carbide (SiC) power semiconductors that could take a big bite out of the 20-percent of … Continue reading

Secret co-founder leaves over app re-design

Screen-Shot-2014-12-18-at-11.38.44-AMIf you didn’t care for the Secret redesign, you’re not alone. We’re sure plenty of your friends have made similar remarks about the visual pop of text overlaid onto pics being better than the streaming posts. It’s entirely possible the mostly white interface is bland to some, or the lack of anything beyond what looks like an eReader screen dissuades … Continue reading

Turns out, Americans don’t believe what Scientists know

plasma-globeScience may be all about quantifiable facts rather than beliefs, but the gulf between what scientists think and what the US public at large believes true is shockingly wide, new research suggests. Although scientific endeavor is rated highly by the general public, some of the conclusions involved are less accepted, with climate change, genetically-modified foods, and childhood vaccinations all not … Continue reading

Verizon backpedals on ‘supercookies’, will allow users to opt-out

verizon-wireless-logo-600x336Do you know what a ‘supercookie’ is? It sounds delightful, but in this context, it’s really not. Verizon Wireless has been tracking users for (mostly) marketing purposes, and assigning customers special codes. Being tracked for marketing was opt-out, but those codes were not deletable or opt-out. Some began dubbing those codes ‘supercookies’ because marketers could still access them and pick … Continue reading

Searching for Transcendence: A Report

As far as I can tell, human beings seek transcendence. One of my favorite authors, the twentieth century Oxford and Cambridge literature professor C. S. Lewis (full disclosure: I just wrote a book about him), offered this simple, logically compelling phrase:

If I find in myself desires which nothing in this world can satisfy, the only logical explanation is that I was made for another world.

Lewis believed that this argument from desire constitute one of the strongest proofs for God’s existence. (Lewis even wrote an autobiography about his this search for something beyond this world, which he named “Joy,” and called the book Surprised by Joy.)

Desire for something more leads to God. I’m currently teaching a college class on Transcendence and Human Knowledge. In it, we read selected great books that track human desire for something beyond normal human experience, and as I begin this class I wonder if all human beings search for transcendence and whether this leads to God. Throughout this class, I’ll be keeping in mind that we live in a world where 30% of emerging adults (18-30 year olds), by some measures, profess no religious affiliation.

And yet, as I look back in intellectual history, I see signs of this search. As Augustine in his early fifth century Confessions, “Lord, you have made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.” He gives a natural yearning for God both an existential caste.

Certainly, there are counter examples, like the ancient Epicurean philosopher-poet Lucretius, who quite confidently chided his readers that this kind of search was nonsense. As the introduction to my Penguin edition of Lucretius’s On the Nature of Things comments, his philosophy “is a strict materialism, which denies the existence of anything magical, mysterious, or transcendent.” Though his materialistic philosophy had its moments of despair–“Life is one long struggle in the dark”–he was also able to find respite from the problems of transcendence. In fact, he turned this search on its head and denied its goodness, arguing that looking beyond this world leads directly to anxiety about dying and the related question of immortality. Instead, he argued, “death is nothing to us nor does it concern us a scrap, seeing that the nature of the spirit we possess is something mortal.” Ultimately, he found happiness elsewhere, “But if one should guide his life by true principles, man’s greatest wealth is to live on a little with contented mind; for a little is never lacking.”

To take two, later examples, the famous (or infamous) Protestant theologian, John Calvin–one whose humanistic roots we often forget–wrote similarly of the “awareness of divinity.” Calvin was not out to prove God, but to state that inherent in human existence is a basic, vague, and powerful natural knowledge of God. In his vastly influential 1559 Institutes of the Christian Religion, he wrote, “There is within the human mind, and indeed by natural instinct, an awareness of divinity.” This awareness of divinity or sensus divinitatis is “beyond dispute” according to Calvin.

A just a century after Calvin, at the flowering of modern science, the mathematician Blaise Pascal offered another proof for God. He began, in a similar vein to Augustine with our existential search: “By nature, we all seek happiness.” But where do we seek it? “Some seek the good in authority, some in intellectual inquiry and knowledge, some in pleasure.” Pascal continued by observing that all these various potential sources for happiness, for a beautiful life, leave us craving for more. He pondered what that meant:

What else does this craving, proclaim but that there was once in man a true happiness, of which all that now remains is the empty print and trace? This he tries in vain to fill with everything around him… since this infinite abyss can be filled only with an infinite and immutable object; in other words by God himself.

Read a certain way, Pascal’s famous Wager challenges his readers to stake their lives on the existence of a God who brings ultimate joy into eternity. In other words, Pascal argues, we need to bet that this search for transcendence has its fulfillment in God.

(Speaking of great scientific thinkers, I can’t help but note the death this week of the UC Berkeley professor Charles Townes, the Nobel Laureate creator of the laser, who expertly brought together scientific discovery with religious transcendence. But perhaps I digress….)

The question for me–as work through these texts with my college students–is how we understand this search and its future. For my money, I don’t think the desire for transcendence is going away. But I do wonder if students will bet their lives that the answer for this search lies beyond our world.

Discovering Five Great Organic Wines

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by guest blogger Adam Teeter, cofounder of VinePair, a site offering a new, unpretentious way to talk about wine

Everywhere you turn today, everything seems to be organic. What once was a movement championed by health food stores and healthy-lifestyle companies like Rodale has gone mainstream, with even Walmart now in on the action.

As the organic movement has become more pervasive in our food culture, more people have begun to seek out organic products, and more and more items are now featuring organic labels. As we’d expect, the movement has also dramatically infiltrated the wine market, with thousands of producers across the world converting their vineyards in order to grow organic grapes and attain the organic label.

In theory, the organic movement is an incredibly good one for wine: We all want to consume less pesticides and fewer chemicals, as well as treat the land and plants that produce our grapes with respect. But just because a wine has an organic label doesn’t automatically mean the wine’s taste is right for you–the truth is always in the bottle. It’s also important to note that many wineries around the world produce their grapes using organic practices yet never bother to attain the seal, due to the cost and bureaucracy surrounding it.

All warnings aside, though, many organically labeled wines are really great, but it can be hard to wade through all of the offerings in order to find them. So that you don’t have to try every bottle of organic wine out there to discover one you might love, we decided to taste a few for you.

We headed over to The Natural Wine Company in Brooklyn, New York–a shop that specializes in organic and biodynamic wines–and picked up a few bottles. After tasting all of them (we know, it was a tough job), we picked out five great organic wines that will knock your socks off:

For Organic Pizza Night
Masciarelli Montepulciano D’Abruzzo
This wine comes from the largest organic estate in Italy, and it’s the perfect wine for pizza night. It’s an incredibly accessible crowd-pleaser. Even though the wine had some tannin, the amount of dryness it created in our mouths was not overpowering, and there were a lot of delicious fruit flavors that we all enjoyed.
For the Organic Outdoor Brunch
Dibon Cava Rosado
As soon as we popped the cork on this bottle, we could immediately smell the wine’s delicious strawberry aromas. This is a great wine for a hot summer day. The wine had an extremely bright and refreshing acidity, like a cold glass of lemonade, and the bubbles woke up our palate.
To Drink Like a Northern Italian
Roagna Dolcetto
While Nebbiolo may be the most famous grape of the Piedmont, Dolcetto is the wine many northern Italians drink most often. That is because Dolcetto is a wine to be drunk every day, with every kind of food. This wine was typical of most Dolcettos, as it was aged in stainless steel, which gave it a very bright flavor similar to that of tart, dark, sour cherries. The tannins in the wine were also very present, nicely drying out our mouths.
To Experience Malbec the French Way
Clos Siguier les Camilles Malbec
Malbec became famous via Argentina, but it was actually born, like many popular grapes, in France. This wine is an easy drinker, with many of us commenting on how smooth and round it was. It’s the perfect wine to open when you’re reading a good book or turning on a movie.
A Wine Forged in a Volcano
Terre Nere Etna Rosso
While this red wine wasn’t actually forged in a volcano, it was grown directly next to an active one. The Mt. Etna area of Sicily is one of the most exciting wine regions to emerge in recent years, with the wines having similar characteristics to great burgundies. This wine was smooth and delicate, just like good pinot noir, making it great for all kinds of dishes, from roast chicken to a nice summer salad.

578126_991793081577_1700052465_nBesides cofounding VinePair, Adam Teeter has spent the past nine years of his life obsessed with wine and trying to remove the elitism often associated with the industry. In 2010, founded Vivo in Vino, a music series that paired cutting-edge bands, such as The Antlers and Freelance Whales, with accessible wine makers like Mouton Noir and Brooklyn Oenology in an intimate setting. Adam also created and wrote Juiced, a television show about wine and culture that was optioned by Herzog TV. Adam is a winner of the Left Bank Bordeaux Cup American Wine-Tasting Championship. When not obsessing over wine, he has also consulted in a marketing strategy capacity for startups including Shutterstock, Tablet Magazine, and JDub Records.

 

For more from Maria Rodale, visit www.mariasfarmcountrykitchen.com

 

 

Why The Internet Loves To Laugh At Poor Black People

It’s a difficult thing to see how others look at you.

W.E.B. DuBois recognized this in his landmark essay on “double consciousness,” a term the writer and civil rights activist first coined in the Atlantic Monthly piece, “Strivings of the Negro People.” DuBois would later expound on the concept in the 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk, and his writings hold an eerie relevance today. “It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity,” DuBois wrote. “One ever feels his two-ness—an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.”

<i>A Matter of Inches</i>: Clint Malarchuk's Lifelong Battle With Mental Illness

Besieged throughout his life by dread, anxiety, insecurity, resentment, depression, suicidal thoughts and obsessive-compulsive disorder, Clint Malarchuk reached the NHL and played parts of 11 seasons.

Hockey was his escape.

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As a boy, Malarchuk faced such deep anxiety that he missed school and was eventually hospitalized. His father was an alcoholic who would smash dishes on the floor and throw plates across the room in the middle of dinner. His mother would try to keep him away from the violent outbursts, but it was impossible when dad came home drunk.

His diagnosed OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) affected the way he trained, and he was known for maintaining one of the most obsessive fitness regimens among NHL players. His depression intensified after a horrific on-ice accident nearly claimed his life. On March 26, 1989, Malarchuk’s jugular vein was accidentally sliced by the skate of an opposing player.

The boundary between life and death was a matter of inches.

Throughout his career, he still managed to keep his afflictions private. Then, one day, he picked a gun up and pushed the barrel against his chin. It was like a scene in the movies — weapon titled on an angle, towards his throat. He pulled the trigger. The bullet tore through his chin and ripped en route for his brain. It buried in his skull. Part of his tongue and several of his teeth were gone. Somehow he survived.

Once again, only a matter of inches saved his life.

The title of Malarchuk’s new memoirs — a gripping, unforgettable prose of purgatory on ice — is suitably telling: A Matter of Inches: How I Survived in the Crease and Beyond. Honing his life to its essentials, he makes it seem as if the story is telling itself, slamming its fist against your forehead.

Reducing Stigmatization of Mental Illness

The book is one-part hell, two-parts healing. It’s an odyssey of fortitude and pain that sheds necessary light on the consequences of how mental illness plagues the human brain.

“I believe that the book reduces the stigmatization of mental illness,” said Malarchuk, 53. “That’s a tough thing with men in particular. We are mostly from the ‘don’t cry’ and ‘don’t show emotion’ mentally. We hear that we should ‘man up’ or ‘cowboy up,’ and a lot of it is societal. We should view depression not as a weakness, but as a sickness. I can now recognize anxiety and depression, and ask what’s the reason for these feelings. And that’s a hard thing to do for a ‘man’s man,’ a blue collar guy, a miner, or someone in the oil patches and camps of Alberta. The last thing you want to do is look or be vulnerable.”

Following his suicide attempt, Malarchuk tried to convince authorities and others that the gun incident was a mistake and he tried to seal it away without the world knowing and seeing what he’d done.

“The goalie is supposed to be a mentally tough guy, a guy who can handle the pressure. The goalie is supposed to be unflappable. But I had to hide it — hide all my anxieties. I was a great actor. I had to hide all my thoughts and nervousness and pressures. Throughout my career, I was still acting in practice. I was good around the team, but when I left the rink or I was alone, I had anxiety, depression and OCD. Since writing the book, I’ve had a lot of former players thank me. They don’t feel alone or weak anymore. They see it as being sick, not weak.”

Horror on Ice: “Get the stretcher — he’s bleeding to death!”

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Malarchuk’s name is forever linked to a Wednesday night in 1989 at the Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo. It was still in the first period and the Sabres netminder had not faced many shots yet. His team led 1-0 over the St. Louis Blues. The puck was on the boards in the corner and he was on his post. The Blues’ Steve Tuttle charged to the net, looking for a pass. Buffalo defenseman Uwe Krupp pulled Tuttle down from behind and slid into Malarchuk, skates first. It felt like “a kick to the mask.” Then the blood gushed. Referee Terry Gregson’s eyes bulged. “Get the stretcher — he’s bleeding to death!”

Malarchuk received 300 stitches to repair his jugular.

“I used to be numb to it,” said Malarchuk. “I had told it and talked about it so many times. But I didn’t know then that it would be the cause of so many problems 20 years later. I was diagnosed with PTSD (Post-Tramautic Stress Disorder), and then you talk about it in a dark way for your therapy, so I dealt with it that manner. Now, I don’t watch the video any longer because I know it has an effect, even if it is just subconsciously. Hey, I wasn’t a superstar. There were many other guys who had similar careers and who are not remembered. So in some way, I’m grateful that it’s out there — the video. It gives people the connection to me. There is a younger generation who have similar struggles, and they say, ‘wow, this guy did play.’ There is an automatic connection.”

The frightening experience left Malarchuk unable to sleep without dreaming about his throat being torn, but any thought of discussing his ordeal with a mental health professional was never considered. He returned to action a mere 10 days later, as soon as the stitches were taken out.

“That incident magnified my OCD, my depression, and my anxiety, and it left me not even being able to leave the house. Life did spiral after that. It’s an important part of my experience, and it is directly related to my mental decline because of trauma. There was no counseling then. Richard Zednik (accidentally cut in the throat in a game in 2008) had counseling, his teammates had counseling. With the Zednik incident, if you were directly or indirectly involved, if you had family, you had counseling offered. We’ve come that far since my accident. And I believe that lifts the stigma a little bit. There were no offerings to anyone who was involved when I got cut. There were two heart attacks in the stands at the game and people passing out. That was an indicator that people had been traumatized. Back then, trauma was even thought of or even considered.”

After the accident, the effects of that trauma set off Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He drank and fought. He swallowed a handful of sleeping pills and chased it with a bottle of whiskey. His heart stopped. His NHL career ended.

Malarchuk has been on a rollercoaster of successes and relapses ever since. He lives on a Nevada ranch where he conducts a horse dentistry practice, which is on hold while he promotes the book and mental-health issues.

Writing Book Triggers Relapse

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The memoir documents his ongoing battle with alcohol, his hair-trigger temper and his six-month institutionalization initiated by his fourth-wife Joanie. Malarchuk said the anxiety involved with reliving so many hurtful memories during the writing process led to his professional demise as a goaltending coach. His drinking became obvious to team heads late in the 2013-2014 season, prompting Calgary Flames president of hockey operations Brian Burke to confront him and get him help he dearly needed. He said that he was thankful for the intervention even though it was accompanied by news he wouldn’t be brought back this year.

“The book was absolutely horrible to write,” said Malarchuk. “It caused me to relapse with alcohol. It brought up so many emotions and feelings, and got me to thinking. Some of it is embarrassing, like being arrested by the police and escaping from the mental hospital. I think that its deepness and honesty has helped many people. If I were to only go halfway, I would only be helping people in the halfway area. This book will help those who’ve been to the deepest, darkest places. I am grateful to have done it. In the morning, I read the emails of support, and it fuels my day to go forward.”

Joanie’s love and support of her husband is one of the book’s most memorable assets.

“Joanie’s understanding has made us closer and stronger,” said Malarchuk. “At the Q&A sessions, the questions go to her. It’s been fabulous. They want her to sign the book. She is the hero in my life and the book. And now she is giving her side, too. It’s incredible helpful for people who have a loved one who is depressed or mentally unwell.”

Malarchuk is acutely vulnerable to endless setbacks due to his mental instability and the drinking that went on to try mask it.

“Right now, I’m doing really good, so it’s a story of hope,” said Malarchuk.

Malarchuk, however, is wise enough to realize he will always be struggling with and fighting against mental illness and that he is always just one step away from peril and ruin if he doesn’t commit to honesty and recovery. He knows that it would be dangerous for him to think that he is utterly in command of his epic fight.

“Every day, I have taught myself to be aware of my emotions and thoughts,” said Malarchuk. “It’s about recognizing and stepping back out of the cycle. I’ve learned meditation and I use daily exercise as part of the daily ritual. I believe the 12-step program is important. On good days, I do them because I don’t want to spiral. It is a matter of life and death.”

Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Brian D’Ambrosio is the author of “Warriors on the Ice,” which features discussions about the end of fighting in the NHL with 30 of the toughest warriors ever to play the game, including Tim Hunter, Glen Cochrane and Tony Twist. His most recent book, “Warrior in the Ring,” is a well-received, gripping biography of a forgotten Native American world boxing champion.