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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 6 declined, 3 accepted (9 total, 33.33% accepted)

Security

Submission + - Report IDs Most Dangerous TLDs (yahoo.com)

CWRUisTakingMyMoney writes: "Companies that assign addresses for Web sites appear to be cutting corners on security more when they assign names in certain domains than in others, according to a report to be released Wednesday by antivirus software vendor McAfee Inc.

McAfee found the most dangerous domains to navigate to are .hk, .cn, and .info.

Of all .hk sites McAfee tested, it flagged 19.2 percent as dangerous or potentially dangerous to visitors; it flagged 11.8 percent of .cn sites and 11.7 percent of .info sites that way.

A little more than 5 percent of the sites under the .com domain — the world's most popular — were identified as dangerous."

Government

Submission + - US Court: Paper Money Discriminates Against Blind

CWRUisTakingMyMoney writes: A US Appeals Court ruled on Tuesday that paper money discriminates against blind people who must rely on others to tell them what denomination of money they have.

A US federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that the country's one-sized paper money discriminates against the blind and told the government to change the currency's size and texture. The court upheld a previous ruling in November 2006 by federal Judge James Robertson who had ordered the Treasury Department to find a way to accommodate the more than three million visually-impaired Americans who have trouble distinguishing the different US denominations which are all the same size and color. By a vote of two to one, the appeals court agreed with the earlier decision favoring the American Council of the Blind and referred the case back to Robertson to examine practical steps to be taken. "A large majority of other currency systems have accommodated the visually impaired, and the (treasury) secretary does not explain why US currency should be any different," the court said in its ruling.
The Internet

Submission + - .su Lives On, Stronger than Ever

CWRUisTakingMyMoney writes: Yahoo! Finance has a story about the defunct Soviet Union's .su TLD. "Sixteen years after the superpower's collapse, Web sites ending in the Soviet ".su" domain name have been rising — registrations increased 45 percent this year alone. Bloggers, entrepreneurs and die-hard communists are all part of a small but growing online community resisting repeated efforts to extinguish the online Soviet outpost."

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