66395003
submission
ub3r n3u7r4l1st writes:
Students are often keen to exercise their rights but recently there has been an interesting twist — some in India are talking about their right to cheat in university exams.
Keep this in mind when hiring your next H-1Bs over your American counterparts which undergoes extensive liberal arts and ethics education.
65233847
submission
ub3r n3u7r4l1st writes:
When you complain to your cable company, you certainly don’t expect that the cable company will then contact your employer and discuss your complaint. But that’s exactly what happened to one former Comcast customer who says he was fired after the cable company called a partner at his accounting firm.
Be careful next time when you exercise your first amendment rights.
9629278
submission
ub3r n3u7r4l1st writes:
A French judge has issued a national arrest warrant for U.S. cyclist Floyd Landis in connection with a case of data hacking at a doping laboratory, a prosecutor's office said.
French judge Thomas Cassuto, based in the Paris suburb of Nanterre, is seeking to question Landis about computer hacking dating back to September 2006 at the Chatenay-Malabry lab, said Astrid Granoux, spokeswoman for Nanterre's prosecutor's office. The laboratory near Paris had uncovered abnormally elevated testosterone levels in Landis' samples collected in the run-up to his 2006 Tour de France victory, leading to the eventual loss of his medal.
8942712
submission
ub3r n3u7r4l1st writes:
Computer games have a broad appeal that transcends gender, culture, age and socio-economic status. Now, computer scientists in the US think that creating computer games, rather than just playing them could boost students' critical and creative thinking skills as well as broaden their participation in computing. They discuss details in the current issue of the International Journal of Social and Humanistic Computing.