TARDIS Beer Stein: Doctor Brew

Drink up all of time and space with this awesome TARDIS beer stein. Is it bigger on the inside? I hope so, because I am super thirsty. It certainly might appear that way after you’ve had enough to drink.


The 9″ tall glazed blue ceramic stein features relief detailing, and holds up to 50 oz. of your favorite beverage. Drink up until you regenerate my friends.


…or until you pass out, because you swear you just saw your stein de-materialize and then re-materialize before your very eyes, before a tiny Doctor emerges and tells you you have had enough. Which Doctor depends on how many drinks you have had. How many Sonic Screwdrivers am I holding up?

[via Geeks Are Sexy]

2018 PS4 Exclusives Due In First Half Of Next Year


Sony fans wouldn’t have liked that the company didn’t release provide confirmed release dates for the 2018 PS4 exclusives that it unveiled at the E3 2017 gaming expo in Los Angeles earlier this month. On the other hand, Microsoft was forthcoming with the release dates for many of the exclusive titles for the Xbox One. Sony merely said that the new games would be out next year, but we now know that at least these 2018 PS4 exclusives will be released in the first half of next year.

Some of the 2018 PS4 exclusives detailed at E3 2017 include Spider-Man, God of War, Days Gone, and Detroit: Become Human. Sony merely said that these titles would be out next year without confirming whether they will be available in the first quarter or later in the holiday season.

The president of Sony Interactive Entertainment America Shawn Layden has provided some clarity on the matter. He confirmed in an interview with The Telegraph that the 2018 PS4 exclusives like Spider-Man, God of War, and Detroit: Become Human are going to be released in the first half of next year.

“The stuff coming in 2018, all of that is coming in the first half of the year,” he told the scribe. We can expect Sony to provide detailed release the pricing information for these titles towards the end of this year when these titles will merely be a few months from release.

2018 PS4 Exclusives Due In First Half Of Next Year , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Sex Offenders Can Use Social Networks: Supreme Court


Many arguments can be made in favor of keeping sex offenders off of the internet. It wouldn’t be an ideal scenario to give a sex offender the tools to reach out to potential targets on social networks where most people tend to be very open about their lives and their routines. However, the Supreme Court has been mulling over the question that whether a blanket ban can be applied to prevent anything bad that might happen if sex offenders were allowed to access social networks. The highest court in the land doesn’t believe that to be the case.

The United States Supreme Court has, in a ruling pertaining to a case where a college student preyed on an underage girl, struck down a law enacted by North Carolina that imposed a blanket ban on sex offenders.

The law barred them from visiting social networking sites that underage kids might frequent. The law was held to be so broad that it violated free speech rights by restricting offenders from modern social networks.

The court has ruled that in this day and age if someone isn’t on a social network, they will not be able to frequently interact with society even if they have the purest of motives.

For example, if offenders are banned from visiting social networks, they won’t be able to keep in touch with their family over Facebook. This law thus hinders their ability to exercise their First Amendment rights.

The crucial question is that how can the offender be expected to rehabilitate and rejoin the society if they are being prevented from accessing crucial social networks years after they’ve left prison.

The Supreme Court also finds that the law passed by North Carolina can also be misconstrued to include any commercial website, even sites like WebMD or Amazon.

While the justices agree that some form of restriction is required to ensure that predators don’t seek out victims on social networks, they believe that the laws governing those restrictions should be specific in nature and shouldn’t impose a blanket ban on normal internet use.

Sex Offenders Can Use Social Networks: Supreme Court , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Microsoft Offering Free Gift With Xbox One S


Microsoft is welcoming summer with a great new offer on the Xbox One S. Merely days after unveiling the Xbox One X, the company has come out with a new promotion in a bid to sell more units of the Xbox One S. For a limited time, Microsoft is going to offer a free gift with every purchase of the Xbox One S.

When customers purchase a new Xbox One or Xbox One S console from June 18th through June 24th, they will receive a free gift at no extra cost. Microsoft confirms that this offer is going to be available at most major retailers in the United States. Gifts will vary.

Customers who purchase the console during the aforementioned period from Walmart.com will receive a free Xbox Wireless Controller as a gift. Those who buy the consoles from Best Buy will get the controller as well as three months of Xbox Live Gold.

Microsoft is offering a $50 retailer gift card to customers who purchase the Xbox One or Xbox One S from GameStop and Target from June 18th through June 24th.

Prices for the Xbox One S start at $249. It provides support for 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray, 4K video streaming, and High Dynamic Range. Microsoft has the full list of participating retailers on the official Xbox website.

Microsoft Offering Free Gift With Xbox One S , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Pokemon GO Fest tickets release – for the next event!

Pokemon GO Fest tickets were released today through the official event center webpage online. This event will take place on the 22nd of July, 2017, and between now and then we’ll be running down the details – like how to get a ticket. While the tickets were sold out relatively quickly, additional opportunities will appear before the event begins through … Continue reading

NASA’s Kepler telescope finds more than 200 new planet candidates

While there are a lot of interesting things happening in our own solar system – from Curiosity’s continuing adventure on Mars to New Horizons giving us an up-close look at Pluto – NASA’s Kepler space observatory has been looking into the depths of space. It’s been looking for other planets that may be out there, and today, NASA has published … Continue reading

Despite Protests, Ukraine's LGBTQ Pride Goes Off Without A Hitch

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Ukrainian politicians and foreign diplomats joined thousands marching for gay pride in Kiev on Sunday, carrying banners and waving rainbow and Ukrainian flags in a parade flanked by a thick cordon of helmeted police.

Some supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights see progress in Ukraine as symptomatic of the country’s closer integration with the European Union and rejection of its ties with neighboring Russia.

Sunday’s march was largely incident-free, although around 200 people protested, variously calling it an affront to traditional values and to soldiers fighting pro-Russian separatist rebels in the eastern Donbass region.

Ukrainian authorities have increased their support for gay rights since a pro-Western government took power following the Maidan protests in 2014. In 2015, a law was passed banning workplace discrimination against the LGBT community.

But critics say homophobic attitudes remain widespread.

Six people were detained for trying to breach the security cordon, the police said in a statement.

“Sunny & well organised #KyivPride2017. Another step forward for equality in #Ukraine,” Judith Gough, the British ambassador to Ukraine who joined the march, wrote in a tweet.

A day before the parade, Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, the Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister on European and Euroatlantic Integration, said the parade would help Ukraine shake off its “imperial legacy.”

“There is a consensus in society on the movement of our state in the direction of Europe,” she wrote on Facebook.

“This is not a choice about material wealth. This is a value choice,” she said, adding that a pivot to Europe meant Ukraine learning to respect “individuality and diversity.”

Sunday’s march was a far cry from the violent clashes witnessed at the same event in 2015 but protesters also made their voices heard.

“We cannot allow this march when the country is at war and our brothers are dying on the front,” said Igor, 33. “The Bible and our history are against them.”

The city was embroiled in gay rights row this year as it hosted the Eurovision Song Contest with a slogan to ‘Celebrate Diversity.’ A plan to paint a Soviet-era monument in rainbow colors was resisted by hard-right groups.

 

(Writing by Matthias Williams, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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Michael Flynn Worked With Foreign Cyberweapons Group That Sold Spyware Used Against Political Dissidents

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WASHINGTON ― While serving as a top campaign aide to Donald Trump, former national security adviser Michael Flynn made tens of thousands of dollars on the side advising a company that sold surveillance technology that repressive governments used to monitor activists and journalists. 

Flynn, who resigned in February after mischaracterizing his conversations with the Russian ambassador to the U.S., has already come under scrutiny for taking money from foreign outfits. Federal investigators began probing Flynn’s lobbying efforts on behalf of a Dutch company led by a businessman with ties to the Turkish government earlier this year. Flynn’s moonlighting wasn’t typical: Most people at the top level of major presidential campaigns do not simultaneously lobby for any entity, especially not foreign governments. It’s also unusual for former U.S. intelligence officials to work with foreign cybersecurity outfits.

Nor was Flynn’s work with foreign entities while he was advising Trump limited to his Ankara deal. He earned nearly $1.5 million last year as a consultant, adviser, board member, or speaker for more than three dozen companies and individuals, according to financial disclosure forms released earlier this year.

Two of those entities are directly linked to NSO Group, a secretive Israeli cyberweapons dealer founded by Omri Lavie and Shalev Hulio, who are rumored to have served in Unit 8200, the Israeli equivalent of the National Security Agency.

Flynn received $40,280 last year as an advisory board member for OSY Technologies, an NSO Group offshoot based in Luxembourg, a favorite tax haven for major corporations. OSY Technologies is part of a corporate structure that runs from Israel, where NSO Group is located, through Luxembourg, the Cayman Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and the U.S.

Flynn also worked as a consultant last year for Francisco Partners, a U.S.-based private equity firm that owns NSO Group, but he did not disclose how much he was paid. At least two Francisco Partners executives have sat on OSY’s board.

Flynn’s financial disclosure forms do not specify the work he did for companies linked to NSO Group, and his lawyer did not respond to requests for comment. Former colleagues at Flynn’s consulting firm declined to discuss Flynn’s work with NSO Group. Executives at Francisco Partners who also sit on the OSY Technologies board did not respond to emails. Lavie, the NSO Group co-founder, told HuffPost he is “not interested in speaking to the press” and referred questions to a spokesman, who did not respond to queries.

Many government and military officials have moved through the revolving door between government agencies and private cybersecurity companies. The major players in the cybersecurity contracting world ― SAIC, Booz Allen Hamilton, CACI Federal and KeyW Corporation ― all have former top government officials in leadership roles or on their boards, or have former top executives working in government.

But it’s less common for former U.S. intelligence officials to work with foreign cybersecurity outfits. “There is a lot of opportunity in the U.S. to do this kind of work,” said Ben Johnson, a former NSA employee and the co-founder of Obsidian Security. “It’s a little bit unexpected going overseas, especially when you combine that with the fact that they’re doing things that might end up in hands of enemies of the U.S. government. It does seem questionable.”  

What is clear is that during the time Flynn was working for NSO’s Luxembourg affiliate, one of the company’s main products — a spy software sold exclusively to governments and marketed as a tool for law enforcement officials to monitor suspected criminals and terrorists — was being used to surveil political dissidents, reporters, activists, and government officials. The software, called Pegasus, allowed users to remotely break into a target’s cellular phone if the target responded to a text message.

Last year, several people targeted by the spyware contacted Citizen Lab, a cybersecurity research team based out of the University of Toronto. With the help of experts at the computer security firm Lookout, Citizen Lab researchers were able to trace the spyware hidden in the texts back to NSO Group spyware. After Citizen Lab publicized its findings, Apple introduced patches to fix the vulnerability. It is not known how many activists in other countries were targeted and failed to report it to experts.

NSO Group told Forbes in a statement last year that it complies with strict export control laws and only sells to authorized government agencies. “The company does NOT operate any of its systems; it is strictly a technology company,” NSO Group told Forbes.

But once a sale is complete, foreign governments are free to do what they like with the technology.

“The government buys [the technology] and can use it however they want,” Bill Marczak, one of the Citizen Lab researchers, told HuffPost. “They’re basically digital arms merchants.”

The month before Flynn joined the advisory board of OSY Technologies, NSO Group opened up a new arm called WestBridge Technologies, Inc., in the D.C. region. (The company was originally registered in Delaware in 2014, but formed in Maryland in April 2016.) Led by NSO Group co-founder Lavie, WestBridge is vying for federal government contracts for NSO Group’s products. Hiring Flynn would provide NSO Group with a well-connected figure in Washington, to help get its foot in the door of the notoriously insular world of secret intelligence budgeting. 

“When you’re trying to build up your business, you need someone who has connections, someone who is seen as an authority and a legitimate presence,” Johnson said. Hiring someone with Flynn’s background in intelligence would “open up doors that they wouldn’t have had access to,” Johnson said.

Throughout 2016, Flynn worked for a number of cybersecurity firms personally and through his consulting firm, Flynn Intel Group. In addition to his advisory board seat at OSY Technologies, he sat on the boards of Adobe Systems, a large software company with Pentagon contracts, and the boards of the cybersecurity companies GreenZone Systems and HALO Privacy. He also had a spot on the advisory council at Palo Alto Networks, a San Francisco-based cybersecurity company with offices in the D.C. region. 

It’s a little bit unexpected going overseas, especially when you combine that with the fact that they’re doing things that might end up in hands of enemies of the U.S. government.
Ben Johnson, former NSA employee

Prominent human rights activists and political dissidents have reported being targeted by NSO’s technology. On August 10, 2016, Ahmed Mansoor, an internationally recognized Emirati human rights attorney, received a text message prompting him to click a link to read “new secrets” about detainees abused in UAE prisons. He got a similar text the next day. But Mansoor, who had already been repeatedly targeted by hackers, knew better than to click the links. Instead, he forwarded the messages to Citizen Lab.

Citizen Lab soon determined that NSO Group’s malware exploited an undisclosed mobile phone vulnerability, known as a zero-day exploit, that enabled its customers ― that is, foreign governments ― to surveil a target’s phone after the target clicked the link included in the phishing text message. If Mansoor had clicked that link, his “phone would have become a digital spy in his pocket, capable of employing his phone camera and microphone to snoop on activity in the vicinity of the device, recording his WhatsApp and Viber calls, logging messages sent in mobile chat apps, and tracking his movements,” Citizen Lab wrote in a report.

Across the globe in Mexico, where Coca-Cola and PepsiCo were working to repeal a tax on sodas imposed in 2014, two activists and a government-employed scientist, all of whom supported the soda tax, received a series of suspicious text messages. The texts, which became increasingly aggressive and threatening, came as the scientist and the activists were preparing a public relations campaign in support of raising the soda tax and promoting awareness of the health risks linked to sugary beverages.

Dr.  Simón Barquera, researcher at Mexico’s National Institute for Public Health, received a text on July 11, 2016, inviting him to click a link the sender said would lead him to a detailed investigation of his clinic. When Barquera didn’t follow through, the texts escalated. On the 12th, he got a text with a link to a purported court document, which the sender claimed mentioned Barquera by name. On the 13th, yet another text included a link that supposedly contained information about a funeral. The day after that, the sender wrote, “You are an asshole Simon, while you are working I’m fucking your old lady here is a photo.” The final text Barquera received in August said that his daughter was in “grave condition” after an accident, and included a link that would supposedly tell him where she was being treated.

Alejandro Calvillo, director of the consumer rights nonprofit El Poder del Consumidor, received a text with a link claiming to be from a man who wanted to know if Calvillo could attend the man’s father’s funeral. Another text sent to Calvillo included a link that the sender said was a viral news story that mentioned him. The final target, Luis Encarnación, a coordinator for the obesity prevention group Coalicion ContraPESO, also received a text with a link claiming that he was named in a news article.

The targets quickly got in touch with Citizen Lab and forwarded their text messages to the researchers. In February 2017, Citizen Lab released a new report linking NSO Group’s technology to the phishing attempts targeting the pro-soda tax campaigners.

Citizen Lab researchers have also identified texts sent last summer to Mexican journalist Rafael Cabrera that they believe were an attempt to infect his phone with NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware. Cabrera, who now works for BuzzFeed Mexico, was targeted by hackers after he broke a story revealing a potential conflict of interest with the Mexican first family and a Chinese company.  

Citizen Lab believes NSO Group may have also sold its mobile phone spying technology to many governments, including those of Kenya, Mozambique, Yemen, Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Thailand, Morocco, Hungary, Nigeria and Bahrain.  

Working with repressive regimes is standard practice in the cyberweapons industry. The Italian surveillance malware firm Hacking Team has worked with dozens of countries known to jail dissidents, according to emails uploaded to WikiLeaks. The FBI and the Drug Enforcement Agency were among the company’s customers, according to the documents.

Despite recent scrutiny over Mansoor’s case, NSO Group’s value has exploded in recent years. Francisco Partners bought the cyberweapons dealer in 2014 for $120 million. It is now reportedly valued at over $1 billion.

The human rights activists targeted with the company’s software haven’t fared as well. Mansoor was arrested in the UAE in March after he signed a letter calling for the release of political prisoners. He remains behind bars.

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Tattooed Mom Shuts Down Suggestion That She's Not The Motherhood 'Type'

A U.K. mom’s viral Facebook post is dispelling the notion that mothers have to conform to a specific image.

Blogger Gylisa Jayne of Cornwall shared a photo of herself with her almost 2-year-old daughter, Lily. In the caption, she offered some powerful thoughts about what motherhood really means. 

“Someone said to me a few days ago, that she hadn’t thought I was the type ‘to be a Mum,’ Jayne wrote, adding that she initially shrugged the comment off. However, the woman’s words bothered her days later. 

“It’s one of those common phrases, we label ‘Mother’ and have a stereotype in our heads,” she said, noting that this label comes with standards beyond simply caring for your child. Jayne wrote:

Mothers are meant to sacrifice every aspect of themselves, to fulfill their role.

Mothers aren’t allowed expensive bags, or shopping trips out, or to have a fresh manicure every few weeks.

Mothers aren’t meant to have tattoos, or coloured hair or piercings.

Mothers aren’t supposed to have histories of being reckless, feckless or just plain fun.

Mothers aren’t meant to have had a colourful life of experiences before they bear children, they are expected to forget their identity to raise someone else.

However, the blogger highlighted the value of “experiencing a bit of life” before becoming a parent. “Without navigating my own chequered past how could I possibly hope to guide a new soul through similar times?” she asked.

Ultimately, Jayne explained that motherhood is not an “exclusive club” requiring all members to look or act a certain way. 

Instead, she said the motherhood community is filled with women from countless different backgrounds who take different approaches to parenting. 

“So I might not fit someone else’s expectations of how I should be, but my daughter reckons I’m doing a pretty good job,” she concluded. 

Jayne told HuffPost the comment that prompted her to write the post came from an old friend she hadn’t seen in awhile but that it was representative of comments and looks she’s gotten from people in the past. 

While many “alternative” moms reacted positively to the post’s message that looks and experiences don’t define a mother, some more traditional or “stereotypical” mom figures said they couldn’t relate as much, Jayne noted. 

The blogger told HuffPost she believes many dads deal with unfair labels too, as fathers are often thought of as helpless bumbling fools. 

Jayne said she mainly wants mothers who read her post to know that you don’t have to lose any part of yourself to become a “good” mom. 

“There isn’t a one size fits all to motherhood, quite the opposite ― everything that we experience in life, and the way we express ourselves are paramount to helping raise another individual,” she told HuffPost. “That’s what we want isn’t it? More individuals, instead of everyone being the same. It’s something to embrace. And something to love.”

H/T Refinery29

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Megyn Kelly's Alex Jones Interview Was A Ratings Flop

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The debate over whether NBC host Megyn Kelly should have given air time to far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones garnered a lot more attention then her interview with him, one analysis found.

With just 3.5 million viewers, “Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly” came in last place among the four major networks during the 7 p.m. time slot, according to Nielsen Media Research. Neilsen hasn’t released details of its insights, but several media outlets obtained early copies. 

Kelly’s new show, which premiered this month, was beat out by an ABC rerun of “America’s Funniest Home Videos” with 3.7 million viewers, a CBS rerun of “60 Minutes” with 5.3 million viewers, and Fox’s U.S. Golf Open Championship coverage with 6.1 million viewers.

In the crucial 18-49 age demographic, Kelly’s interview tied with CBS for a 0.5 rating, but lost to ABC’s 0.7 and Fox’s 1.4. 

It’s a major ratings flop for the network, surprising after a buildup to the interview that seemed likely to stir interest.  

Jones, who heads the conspiracy website Infowars, is known for propagating outrageous, false stories, including claims that the 9/11 attacks were an “inside job” and that the parents of the 20 students slain at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 were actors who helped fake the slaughter of children and school employees. Followers include President Donald Trump, who appeared on Jones’ radio show during the presidential campaign.

The interview with Jones prompted calls for a boycott from those who feared the publicity would expose him and his viewpoints to a new audience

Kelly’s first two installments of her NBC show fared much better, averaging a 0.7 rating in the 18-49 age demographic and 4.9 million viewers, according to Nielsen data. Her debut interview with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on June 4 drew 6.1 million viewers, though that was largely considered a ratings failure as well. 

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