NYT: NSA monitors, graphs some US Citizens’ social activity with collected metadata

Just how does the NSA piece together all that metadata it collects? Thanks to “newly disclosed documents and interviews with officials,” The New York Times today shed light on how the agency plots out the social activity and connections of those it’s spying on. Up until 2010, the NSA only traced and analyzed the metadata of emails and phone calls from foreigners, so anything from US citizens in the chains created stopgaps. Snowden-provided documents note the policy shifted later in that year to allow for the inclusion of Americans’ metadata in such analysis. An NSA representative explained to the NYT that, “all data queries must include a foreign intelligence justification, period.”

During “large-scale graph analysis,” collected metadata is cross-referenced with commercial, public and “enrichment data” (some examples included GPS locations, social media accounts and banking info) to create a contact chain tied to any foreigner under review and scope out its activity. The highlighted ingestion tool in this instance goes by the name Mainway. The NYT article also highlights a secret report, dubbed “Better Person Centric Analysis,” which details how data is sorted into 164 searchable “relationship types” and 94 “entity types” (email and IP addresses, along with phone numbers). Other documents highlight that during 2011 the NSA took in over 700 million phone records daily on its own, along with an “unnamed American service provider” that began funneling in an additional 1.1 billion cellphone records that August. In addition to that, Snowden’s leak of the NSA’s classified 2013 budget cites it as hoping to capture “20 billion ‘record events’ daily” that would be available for review by the agency’s analysts in an hour’s time. As you might expect, the number of US citizens that’ve had their info bunched up into all of this currently remains a secret — national security, of course. Extended details are available at the source links.

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Via: The Verge

Source: New York Times

Chinese state media squashes claims of less restricted internet in Shanghai zone (updated)

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A few days ago, the South China Morning Post claimed that blocks put on websites like Twitter, Facebook and The New York Times were to be lifted in Shanghai’s new free-trade zone. And the justification made sense, too: relax restrictions to make visitors happy, and potentially cash in on accelerated foreign investment as a result. Plausible, sure, but according to state-run news outlet the People’s Daily, completely untrue. As it turns out, the Chinese powers that be allegedly have no intention of allowing web traffic in the free-trade zone to circumvent the Great Firewall, which means visiting Twitter addicts will still have to turn to Weibo for their social network / microblogging fix.

[Image credit: Wikimedia Commons]

Update: People.com.cn (not the People’s Daily, as reported earlier) has since pulled its post. There’s no explanation as to why.

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Via: The Register

Source: TechWeb (Chinese)

China said to be unblocking sites like Facebook, Twitter and the NYT, but only in a small part of Shanghai

China said to be unblocking sites like Facebook, Twitter and the NYT, but only in a small area of Shanghai

Given how large a mobile market China has become, and its role in gadget manufacturing globally, we sometimes forget the government of this increasingly tech-aware country still dictates what corners of the web its peoples can see. Today, the South China Morning Post reports the state has decided to unblock several foreign internet sites “considered politically sensitive,” but only in the free-trade zone of Shanghai’s Pudong New Area. According to “government sources,” the move to open access to sites including Facebook, Twitter (both of which were cut off in 2009) and The New York Times (blocked last year) is so visitors can “live and work happily in the free-trade zone.” The greater goal is to make the area more attractive to foreign companies, beyond the favorable regulatory and tax environment, of course. Furthermore, the Chinese are allegedly beckoning overseas firms to come in and “provide internet services” for the new, 30 square kilometer zone. The Great Firewall may remain firmly up for the rest of the country and its billion-odd population, but one step at a time and all that.

[Image credit: Wikimedia Commons]

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Via: Quartz

Source: South China Morning Post

UCSF study shows gaming makes you cognitively younger (video)

A slew of negatives plague video games — Peter Pan Syndrome, hyper-violence, camping — but their youthfulness could do just what Nintendo’s Brain Age promised: improve elderly brain function. Over four years, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco had a group play a custom game (video of it in action is after the break) that tasks players to drive and identify road signs that appear while ignoring certain others, according to the New York Times. It’s not quite Grand Theft Auto, but it proved how hard successfully multitasking becomes with age. However, after training with the game, the 60 to 80 year old test subjects stomped those a fraction of their age who had no prior exposure to it. What’s more, this experience produced brain functionality benefits outside of the game.

This isn’t a fluke, either. For proof, the scientists used electroencephalography to monitor the older subjects and found that while playing, the theta wave activity — associated with attention — in their prefrontal cortexes looked like that of a younger adult’s. These findings may help scientists understand what areas of the brain “could and should” be manipulated to improve cognitive functions like memory. The study appears in today’s edition of Nature and backs up similar research from May that also used a concentration-heavy game, and reported like results. Now if you’ll pardon us, we have to show our parents that all those hours of our childhood weren’t wasted.

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Source: New York Times

DNS hack takes The New York Times offline (update: Twitter images were affected too)

DNS hack brings The New York Times offline

For the second time this month, The New York Times has gone offline. This time around, the Syrian Electronic Army is likely to blame, with a Domain Name System (DNS) hack crippling the news org’s online operation. The NYT’s web servers are still online, however, so the publication has begun tweeting out direct IP links to recent articles. Meanwhile, Twitter itself may be vulnerable. Hackers have managed to modify some of the registration data, including the contact email address, suggesting an attack on the social site may be imminent.

Update: According to a tweet from the paper’s official account, it’s temporarily publishing updates at news.nytco.com.

Update 2: Twitter has confirmed the twimg.com domain used for images and photos was among those affected. According to the post, the original domain record has been restored and no user information was affected.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: NYT (Twitter)

With its website offline, The New York Times begins posting articles on Facebook

With its website offline, The New York Times begins posting articles on Facebook instead

The news cycle doesn’t stop for unscheduled downtime. With its website inaccessible due to “an internal issue,” The New York Times began posting content to Facebook today, beginning with an article on Egypt. “Egypt Declares State of Emergency as Scores Are Killed in Crackdown” is perhaps the first NYT article to debut in full on a social media site before popping up on any of the news org’s own online properties. The news giant is directing its nine million Twitter followers to Facebook for the afternoon’s top stories, which now also include “Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. Sentenced to 2.5 Years” and “Hopes of Arab Spring Dashed by Region’s Turmoil.” For “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” head over to Facebook.

Update: As of 2PM, it appears that the Times is back online, though the most recent site update was nearly three hours before, at 11:07AM ET.

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Source: NYT (Twitter)

The New York Times Leap Motion app: for all the news that’s fit for gestures (video)

The New York Times Leap Motion app for all the news that's fit for gestures video

Few of us reading the morning news enjoy putting our greasy hands on a tablet or newspaper just to flip through articles. With the newly unveiled New York Times app for the Leap Motion Controller, we won’t have to. The release lets news hounds navigate stories (and ads) through a unique interface optimized for touch-free gestures. Both Mac and Windows versions of the NYT app will be available in the Airspace store on July 22nd, the same day Leap Motion ships to customers. More importantly, the app will be free — at least at launch, readers won’t run into the usual paywall. If the prospect of contact-free news has you intrigued, there’s a video demo available after the break.

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Source: New York Times Idea Lab

New York Times to refine subscription model in wake of sliding ad revenue

New York Times to refine its subscription model in wake of sliding advertising revenue

If you’re an avid reader of The New York Times, you’re probably already familiar with its complex subscription model that ranges in price between $15 and $35 per month. Yes, it’s sometimes costly to stay in the loop, but on the upside of the paywall, company CEO Mark Thompson says that readers will soon find a wider array of content packages, including less expensive options. The move may be necessary, and according to Bloomberg, the CEO painted it as “the single most important thing we’re doing in the company.” Today, The New York Times released its earnings for the quarter, which came in slightly below expectations and revealed a decrease in advertising revenue. Recognizing the shift, Thompson will work to make the organization less reliant on ad revenue and more focused on digital subscriptions.

As for its growth strategy, it’s said that we can expect lower pricing tiers that offer access to specific content such as politics, technology and the arts, along with premium tiers that provide feature content and access to events. Curiously, videos and even games will be in the mix, but it’s currently unclear where that’ll fit into the tiered strategy. The New York Times currently serves 708,000 subscribers, which represents a 45 percent increase from the first quarter of 2012. It’s said that we can expect the refined subscription model to arrive sometime in late 2013 or early 2014, and it’ll be very interesting to see just how complex the outlet can go with its pricing.

[Image credit: Adam Kinney / Flickr]

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Source: Bloomberg, paidContent, Q1 Earnings Release

Google Glass app from The New York Times now available to Explorers

As if Google Glass and its clever surprises weren’t intriguing enough, Explorers now have a new app to play with that’s courtesy of The New York Times. As you’ll recall, this service was first unveiled at SXSW, which delivers the latest headlines and accompanying imagery upon a wearer’s request — even to the point of reading an article aloud, if you so desire. If you’re lucky enough to have Glass in your possession, you can configure the app at a special landing page on The Times’ website. There, once you hit the Connect My Glass button, you’ll be asked to link your Google account with the service, and grant it access to basic account information, your location and your Google Glass timeline. We’ve configured the app on our own headset, but for the moment, aren’t able to retrieve any articles. That said, the crew at TechCrunch have found better luck, who describe the ability to easily navigate through a stream of news and photos with a quick tilt of the head. If you’re willing, head on over to The New York Times’ website and give the service a whirl — and kindly share your impressions in the comments below.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: The New York Times

New York Times videos now exempt from paywall, free ‘for the foreseeable future’

New York Times videos now exempt from paywall, backed by ad support

The New York Times announced this morning that its paywall is coming down from the videos section of its website, meaning that you can now enjoy more than 10 videos per month about vegetable caramelization best practices. The free access comes at the price of advertiser content, of course, which runs ahead of the videos and hocks both Microsoft wares and Acura vehicles currently. A NYT press rep told Engadget that the move to unlimited video access isn’t temporary, but “never say never.” We were also told that it isn’t a test, and, “This is what we’re doing now. In terms of when and if we’ll move it back behind the gateway, we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it. We literally have no idea. For the foreseeable future, it’s free.”

The Grey Lady has been experimenting with its digital presence for several years now, and the publication instituted a site-wide paywall in 2011. The setup allowed readers free access to 10 pieces per month before being forced to login with a paid access account — like so many paywalls, it can be easily gotten around using alternate web browsers, and, for a long while, by simply removing a chunk of the URL that redirected visitors to its paywall, anyone could read an unlimited amount of stories / watch unlimited videos. The paper’s seen financial success in digital form as of late, reporting increased subscriber numbers and increased digital revenue alongside ever-decreasing ad sales.

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