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How your data is being scraped from social media

How your data is being scraped from social media © Getty Images Hackers can manipulate software attached to social media platforms and extract data How much personal information do you share on your social media profile pages? Name, location, age, job role, marital status, headshot? The amount of information people are comfortable with posting online varies. But most people accept that whatever we put on our public profile page is out in the public domain. So, how would you feel if all your information was catalogued by a hacker and put into a monster spreadsheet with millions of entries, to be sold online to the highest paying cyber-criminal?

How your personal data is being scraped from social media

BBC News By Joe Tidy Published How much personal information do you share on your social media profile pages? Name, location, age, job role, marital status, headshot? The amount of information people are comfortable with posting online varies. But most people accept that whatever we put on our public profile page is out in the public domain. So, how would you feel if all your information was catalogued by a hacker and put into a monster spreadsheet with millions of entries, to be sold online to the highest paying cyber-criminal? That s what a hacker calling himself Tom Liner did last month for fun when he compiled a database of 700 million LinkedIn users from all over the world, which he is selling for around $5,000 (£3,600; €4,200).

Pop Culture Imports: Best Foreign Movies and TV Streaming Now – /Film

Cast: Kumiko Aso, Haruhiko Kato, Koyuki, Kurume Arisaka. An early Japanese techno-horror film (it came out in 2001, when the internet was not nearly as ubiquitous as it is now),  Pulse is still perhaps the best depiction of the isolating terror of the internet. The Kiyoshi Kurosawa film follows several people mainly plant shop worker Kudo Michi (Kumiko Aso) and economics student Ryosuke Kawashima (Haruhiko Kato) who are beset upon by ghosts invading the world of the living via the internet. The first half of the film is full of genuinely unnerving and spooky imagery, which fills the movie with a creeping dread, before 

In Quo Vadis, Aida?, we all share the protagonist s pain - New Eastern Europe - A bimonthly news magazine dedicated to Central and Eastern European affairs

Quo Vadis, Aida? review: Bosnia & Herzegovina Oscar entry

Print In “Quo Vadis, Aida?,” Jasmila Žbanić’s swift and shattering movie about the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, a woman climbs onto a small structure and stares out over a barbed-wire fence into a sea of weary bodies and frightened faces. This is Aida (Jasna Đuričić), and she’s searching for some of her family members, but as the camera pans across the crowd, echoing her desperate gaze, the enormity of the tragedy at hand comes into focus. It’s not the last time Aida will experience this elevated vantage, sometimes with a megaphone in hand as she translates instructions and information for her fellow refugees. She knows her words are worthless, a mix of vague reassurances and outright lies; she also knows that, under the circumstances, hearing the truth might be just as futile.

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