POPULARITY
How do you become a Habbo Hotel Scammer? And why did Russell ask a bunch of young men which of them was going to pleasure him in the street? Podcast royalty and ex-Youtube magnate JacckMaate is in the studio, and it's as fun, breezy and enjoyable as you would imagine from a man of his mastery of chat. Jack's stories about his days as a Habbo gangster are sensational. JaackMaate's Happy Hour is one of the biggest podcasts out there and it's available exclusively through Spotify. Go listen, then explore all the things that Jaack does. He's great. If you'd like to get the podcast without being interrupted by adverts, and get an extra show every week, AND get it all a day before everyone else, then you can! You can join our Patreon. It's inexpensive and we would love to have you as part of the club. Click this link to join or find out more: patreon.com/RussellHoward And that's all folks! Have a mad good week. Mad good I tell you. xxx Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Vond jij Het Habbo-mysterie een goede podcast? Stem dan op ons voor de Dutch Podcast Awards Publieksprijs. Dat kan tot 1 november via podcastawards.nl/stemmenSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Päivän agendana meidän kavereille käyneitä noloja juttuja, pääosin aiheet kuitenkin pyörivät ulosteen seassa. Hauskoja ja ajankohtaisia juttuja kuten Habbo Hotel, Cheek-viha ja nuorisoslangitesti vuodelta 2017. Uutisissa kasin aamuja, nikotiinipusseja ja erotiikkaa. Tervetuloa matkaan! Fanipuhelin: 0404416504 (WhatsApp) Tuhannes - TikTok / tuhannes Tuhannes - Instagram / tuhannes 0:00) Alkulätinät(3:21) Habbo-hotel tyttöystävät(6:04) Nuorisokielitesti vuodelta 2017(13:53) Tumen kuulumiset, koulu stresi huolia ja syyskävelyitä(17:01) Johanneksen kuulumiset(17:26) Älkää menkö TikTok mainoksiin(20:05) Tumen näkemä hauska TikTok(23:15) Cheek - viha(26:34) Arvataan klikkiotsikoita(26:55) 1. Klikkiotsikko(27:45) 2. Klikkiotsikko(28:37) 3. Klikkiotsikko(29:45) Ajankohtaisia uutisia!!(29:51) Raastava näky odotti Roosaa eroottisessa Airbnbä(34:35) Koulun tunnelma muuttui yhdessä yössä(40:14) Nikotiinipussit aikuiseen makuun(42:48) Johannes lopettaa nikotiinin(44:57) KUKA KYSY? Kaverille kävi nolosti(46:06) Kaveri kävi treffeillä(53:10) Kaverille kävi vahinko(57:03) Loppulätinät
A house is not a home, but a virtual hotel IS! Today occasional streamer and otherwise regular person Kristin Thorson returns to the podcast to discuss her time with the internet sensation Habbo Hotel and her light claims to Habbo fame. Show Notes Kristin Thorson - Twitch - Bluesky - YouTube Conner McCabe – Bluesky - Twitter – Twitch Produced, Edited, and Original music by Jeremy Schmidt – Video Games: a Comedy Show Call Me By Your Game – Instagram – Twitter - Bluesky – YouTube - TikTok Super NPC Radio – Patreon - Discord- Bluesky - Twitter – Instagram – Twitch
This week we have a very special guest mix from Habbo Foxx featuring his new release ‘Mess'! on Toolroom Records. Habbo Foxx is a really promising young talent from Leeds (UK) and this one is a fun record combining tech house with steel drums. Habbo Foxx has seen some amazing progress in 2024 through regular performances in London including Ministry of Sound as well as regular radio promotion from the BBC Introducing crew. He also has seen some exciting bookings in Ibiza throughout September.
Stardust is a $35M funded web3 gaming infrastructure and user acquisition service provider's Wallets-as-a-Service (WaaS) product and provides game development tools to build and scale blockchain games. Stardust's Wallets-as-a-service (WaaS) is used by more than 90 active game studios. Why you should listen Stardust's platform offers game developers easy access to the most scalable, secure, and compliant infrastructure for invisible player wallets while empowering them with user acquisition and attribution resources necessary to accomplish their revenue and player retention goals. Headquartered in Palo Alto, California, Stardust supports major gaming studios like Midnight Society, Shrapnel, Habbo, Tilting Point, Stillfront, and more. Stardust recently announced the Starbase, a consumer-facing unified rewards and social gaming platform. Partnering with game titles like Nifty Island, Shrapnel, BloodLoop, Habbo Hotel, Cap'n'Company, and more, Starbase features missions and challenges that allow players to earn Gems while they play their favourite games. Gems are a part of a larger rewards system that aligns incentives between players, games, and advertisers through a broader network called Starnet. The company will be unveiling partners on a weekly basis and has already onboarded over 20 of the top web3 games to the Starbase missions platform. Stardust recently announced a strategic partnership with Shrapnel, a highly-anticipated AAA first-person extraction shooter. The partnership plans to provide scalability to take the first-person shooter to the next level - with the potential to bring tens of millions of players into the blockchain gaming space. WaaS product enabled Shrapnel to offer invisible, custodial wallets to players, providing a seamless game experience while leveraging the underlying Shrapnel subnet. Supporting links Stabull Finance Stardust Andy on Twitter Brave New Coin on Twitter Brave New Coin If you enjoyed the show please subscribe to the Crypto Conversation and give us a 5-star rating and a positive review in whatever podcast app you are using.
Conducido por Pablo Wasserman y Juan Ruocco. Círculo Vicioso https://twitter.com/circulovicioso8 Sitio oficial: https://www.circulovicioso.club/ Descuento de 50 USD para abrir una LLC y banco en USA con Firmaway: https://firmaway.us/servicios-sponsor-cv/ (0:00) INTRO (15:27) Comienza (17:30) Admin y GIF (19:05) Jefes y laburos (23:02) Próximas semanas (27:50) Filosofía y computación (30:50) Sao Paulo y ciudades (36:03) Brasil (39:57) Historia de Brasil y esclavos (44:00) Comida brasilera (45:52) Cultura brasilera (48:20) Argentina y Brasil (56:49) Rio de Janeiro (58:05) Arquitectura brasilera (1:02:33) Cine brasilero (1:03:15) Música brasilera (1:06:21) Maslaton (1:09:50) Sudamérica y progreso (1:16:57) Subte chileno (1:21:04) YouTube brasilero (1:25:15) Ratas y ciudades (1:29:40) Pausa (1:32:07) South Park (1:34:20) Drones (1:37:03) Guerra con drones (1:45:54) Drones en EEUU (1:51:35) Fabricar drones (2:00:20) Tiny whoop (2:04:39) Guerra en Ucrania y propaganda (2:11:06) Argentum, Habbo y crypto (2:21:47) Chile y dwarfs
Original Articles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habbo https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ready_Player_One Join the Wiki Weekends community in our Discord: https://discord.gg/33DNc2ET2h Support the channel via our Patreon: https://patreon.com/WikiWeekends Contact us: wikiweekends@gmail.com With Karl Smallwood: https://www.twitch.tv/karlswood https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUaBEY5s2anSFnsX5oEvjdg https://twitter.com/KarlSmallwood https://www.instagram.com/karlswood/ and Lucas Holland: https://www.twitch.tv/LegendOfKanto https://www.youtube.com/@LegendOfKanto https://twitter.com/LegendOfKanto https://tiktok.com/@KantoLegend_
Anja spendeert steeds meer tijd op Habbo. Ze lijkt wel verslaafd. Ze ontmoet vrienden van Habbo Hotel in het echt en spreekt ook voor het eerst af met Chantal. Dan lijkt alles in sneltreinvaart te gaan… Ze gaat bijna ieder weekend en iedere vakantie met Chantal weg. Ze mist verjaardagen en feestdagen van haar eigen familie. De familie vindt het aanvankelijk leuk, ze zijn blij dat Anja een vriendin heeft, maar dan beginnen ze toch argwaan te krijgen en zich zorgen te maken over het welzijn van Anja. Het schijnt dat er een foto rouleert op het internet waar ze opstaat met een groot pak geld. Daarnaast wordt Anja ziek… Het Habbo-mysterie is een podcast van het AD en de aangesloten regionale dagbladen. Elke week een nieuwe aflevering! Luister de volgende exclusief vooruit op ad.nl/hethabbomysterie We zijn benieuwd naar je mening rondom Het Habbo-mysterie, wil je jouw mening met ons delen? https://q.crowdtech.com/Hx48qNBgHEm-Q0QrW071CgSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Andries Tunru en Jorina Haspels zijn te gast. Gelukkig vinden we een link tussen hen twee. We praten over de gevolgen die kinderen ondervinden van gescheiden ouders. En over het bizarre verhaal van de verdwenen Anja en de game van Habbo Hotel.
Over de mysterieuze verdwijning en dood van de Scheveningse Anja van der Zwan. Op het online spel Habbo Hotel ontmoet ze een Belgische vrouw, waarvan ze compleet in de ban raakt. Wie is zij? En wat bewoog Anja om met haar familie te breken en het grote familiehuis in Scheveningen weg te geven? Het Habbo-mysterie is een podcast van het AD en de aangesloten regionale dagbladen. Elke week een nieuwe aflevering! Luister de volgende exclusief vooruit op ad.nl/hethabbomysterie!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In deze aflevering van Side Quest bespreken we de verjaardag van de Elder Scrolls VI aankondiging, waarover ook Todd Howard zegt dat dit misschien een foutje is geweest. We blikken ook kort vooruit op de Nintendo Direct van deze week, de Elden Ring DLC Shadow of the Erdtree en we bespreken natuurlijk alle games die we deze week hebben gespeeld. Dankzij Sony kunnen we jullie nu ook prachtige beelden voorschotelen op zowel YouTube als Spotify, als je onze gezichtjes wil zien, dan kan dat dus daar. Hier in de studio hebben we een hele zieke camera staan, de Sony FX3. Met deze camera is ook de film The Creator gefilmd en dat zie je ook terug in de kwaliteit van onze opnames. Klik op de afbeelding om meer te leren over de vlogcamera's van Sony! Hoofdstukken (00:00:00) - Intro / wat is er gespeeld? (00:22:55) - Vooruitblik op de Nintendo Direct (00:30:45) - Elden Ring kan blijkbaar nog beter (00:37:20) - Todd Howard over The Elder Scrolls 6 aankondiging (00:44:10) - Discord komt (eindelijk) naar Playstation (00:49:55) - Visions of mana heeft releasedatum (00:52:27) - Habbo is terug (01:00:40) - Media tips (01:07:00) - Stellingen & vragen
Misdaadjournalist Jorina Haspels stuit op een crowdfundings-actie voor Anja van der Zwan, een Scheveningse die gekidnapt zou zijn door een Belgische vrouw die ze ontmoet had op het computerspel Habbo Hotel. Het verhaal lijkt te vreemd om waar te zijn, maar als Jorina in de zaak duikt blijkt het nog gekker dan ze in de eerste instantie dacht... Anja verdwijnt uit het niets uit het leven van haar familie. Ze is praktisch doof en licht autistisch, dus haar familie maakt zich ernstige zorgen. Hoe heeft het zover kunnen komen? En welke rol speelt haar Habbo-vriendin hierin? Jorina heeft duizend vragen, maar we beginnen bij het begin. Wie was Anja? Het Habbo-mysterie is een podcast van het AD en de aangesloten regionale dagbladen. Elke week een nieuwe aflevering! Luister de volgende exclusief vooruit op ad.nl/hethabbomysterie! We zijn benieuwd naar je mening rondom Het Habbo-mysterie, wil je jouw mening met ons delen? https://q.crowdtech.com/8vE-S7sFJE-ynuILs7EQwgSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Over de mysterieuze verdwijning en dood van de Scheveningse Anja van der Zwan. Op het online spel Habbo Hotel ontmoet ze een Belgische vrouw, waarvan ze compleet in de ban raakt. Wie is zij? En wat bewoog Anja om met haar familie te breken en het grote familiehuis in Scheveningen weg te geven? Het Habbo-mysterie is een podcast van het AD en de aangesloten regionale dagbladen. Luister exclusief vooruit op ad.nl/podcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
10 de maio é lembrado por alguns gamers como o dia do aniversário de um popular jogo mobile: Dislyte. Coincidentemente - ou não - o podcaster que vos fala também completou mais um ano de vida nesta data. A oportunidade, portanto, surgiu para que pudéssemos falar sobre jogos, saúde mental e o meu problemático histórico nesse assunto. Games como Dislyte, TheSims, Habbo, Free Fire, Call of Dutty, Saint Seiya Awakening e outros farão parte de uma aventura em busca de responder às seguintes questões… Os jogos são aliados ou adversários da sua saúde mental? A prática pode ser benéfica para a atividade mental? É possível ser um gamer dedicado sem prejudicar sua vida social e suas responsabilidades na vida real? O quão importante jogos como Dislyte são para acolher determinadas pessoas em nossa sociedade? Esta é a primeira parte de uma importante viagem no “Multiverso dos Jogos”. Participe você também! Convidados: @clara_luciane, Instagram; @cristianegabrielac, Instagram; @대시laym, Dislyte servidor 2.Colabore com o Wondernautas: Pix (CPF) 115484246-09Apoie no OreloConheça a página do podcast no Instagram
Syvende sender er skudt i gang hos Spektrum! I dagens afsnit samler vi op på GoSupermodel, Habbo og Moviestarplanet. Dernæst kommer vi ind på sporten hvis typiske klientel er: en mand +40, som er stoppet til fodbold grundet skader og er i gang med en selvrealisering. Denne sport er selvfølgelig er padel tennis. Sidst men ikke mindst kommer vi ind på den gode gamle skinny jeans - rip. Lyt med hver torsdag på Twitch kl. 20-21 og smid et follow på @radio_spektrum på Instagram. Kys dine værter, Lærke, Theo og Signe
Fahd, también conocido como el que desestabilizó la economía del famoso juego "Habbo" o como el Hacker que se construyó a sí mismo a base de curiosidad y "toqueteo a las maquinitas". Viene a desmontarnos mitos sobre el mundo Hacker y a informarnos bien sobre ciberseguridad, nosotros de ti no me lo perdía.
Join us as we talk about our best friend getting married, retro gaming, school stories, Balloon World Cup, Dogs vs Horses, Our greatest fears & accomplishment and more - Enjoy! (0:00) – Best Friend Got Married (22:10) – Worst First Dance Song (27:10) – Club Penguin (33:30) – Miniclip, Habbo, Extreme Pamplona & more (39:30) – Dreaming of eachother (40:45) - Rough Childhoods (42:30) – MyMaths, Splat, Manhunt (48:45) – Balloon World Cup (58:50) – Dogs vs Horses (1:04:05) – 5 New Olympic Sports (1:08:20) – Can we beat Usain Bolt? (1:15:20) – Greatest Fear (D*ath & Failure) (1:23:50) – What do we wish people knew about us? (1:30:15) – Our Worst Decision Ever (1:38:05) – Greatest Accomplishment Follow our socials, podcast platforms & anonymously submit to us - https://linktr.ee/theatypicalpodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theatypicalpodcast/message
Eu Nunca deveria ter jogado Pokemon Go Creepypasta (Ambuplay) O segredo assustador do jogo Hello Heighbor (Ambuplay) Creepypasta Manecraft e as terras distantes (Ambuplay) O pertubador quarto 545 Habbo hotel (Ambuplay) Nunca entre em jogos 666 (Ambuplay) Creepypasta Mortal Kombart Exe (Ambuplay) Pokemon Black (Ambuplay) O bizarro jogo do Mario I Hate you (Ambuplay) GTA san andreas Black edition (Ambuplay) Eu nunca mais vou jogar transformice (Ambuplay)
Heute haben wir Habbo Lüdeling zu Gast. Habbo ist Multi-Investor, Krypto-Experte und baut sich parallel ein Online-Business auf. Wir gehen tiefer auf das Thema Finanzen und Wirtschaft ein und schauen auch, was Mindsest und Persönlichkeitsentwicklung mit Finanzen gemeinsam haben. Free Crypto Webinar http://bit.ly/webinar_crypto-hero Crypto Class https://bit.ly/CryptoClassSalesPage Habbo: https://instagram.com/live_life_free_coaching?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== Instagram Femergy: https://instagram.com/femergy.co?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Instagram von Elisa: https://instagram.com/elisasteffes?igshid=YmMy MTA2M2Y= Instagram von Franzi: https://instagram.com/franziska. j.bock?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Femergy Newsleter: https://bit.ly/3n5fLtH Femergy Twitter: https://twitter.com/femergyco?s=21&+=Bv2g4G99KNjqzjreFh6ggg
Er is een deal! Bijna althans, maar alles wijst erop dat Call of Duty straks op Gamepass staat. Maar voordat we het daar over hebben ontspoort deze aflevering meteen in allerlei zijpaadjes. En bij gebrek aan de echte moppentrommel geeft Marnix dan ook nog zijn beste impressie. Spanning en sensatie!Games die we gespeeld hebben:Diablo 4Zelda: Tears of the KingdomVragen, suggesties of andere opmerkingen kun je makkelijk en snel achterlaten in dit formuliertje of via de mail: info@gamelovepodcast.nl. Wil je niets missen? Bekijk dan onze website, gamelovepodcast.nl, en volg ons op Twitter en Instagram: @gamelovepodcast.
Kuhlmann, Michaelwww.deutschlandfunk.de, BüchermarktDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
¡Tirorí, tirorí! Así nos pasábamos la vida durante nuestra adolescencia, chateando sin parar con amigos y desconocidos, aprendiendo cómo iba eso de Internet. Desde el rey indiscutible que fue MSN Messenger, hasta los SMS, el chat de Terra, Habbo, Chatroulette, el chat de BlackBerry, Omegle... ¡las posibilidades eran infinitas! Como infinitas serán las risas cuando le des al play, porque nos acompaña el maravilloso humorista y creador de contenido SERGIO ENCINAS, todo un titán de Internet y del recuerdo. ¡Agréganos y te mandamos un zumbido! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Conducido por Pablo Wasserman y Juan Ruocco. Círculo Vicioso https://twitter.com/circulovicioso8 Sitio oficial: https://www.circulovicioso.club/ Descuento de 50 USD para abrir una LLC y banco en USA con Firmaway: https://firmaway.us/servicios-sponsor-cv/ 0:00 INTRO 4:41 Comienza 7:31 Gordoneta federal 13:51 Stickers 14:10 Warhammer, Argentum y Skyrim 21:30 Bethesda Games y Fallout 37:44 Secuelas 39:11 Latinos en Netflix 43:32 Crash FTX y Sam Bankman 45:36 Microcentro 48:20 ¿Que es Bull Market? 54:19 Pandemia y aplausos 59:11 Comentarios 1:01:32 Juntada 1:02:39 Argentina Campeon del mundo 1:09:00 Brasil y Ronaldinho 1:12:01 Farfan 1:14:15 Maradona, Messi y selección 1:39:33 Rock nacional y recitales 2:04:49 Roblox, Minecraft y Habbo 2:09:36 Coleccionar Magic 2:12:23 Comentarios 2:13:54 Mono cyberpunk 2:18:34 Cierre y final --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/circulovicioso/support
Jon Jordan talks to Muumiopappa - aka Mika Timonnen, the NFT director at Azerion - about what happened when NFTs were introduced into the long-running online community Habbo (originally Habbo Hotel) and what's happening next.
The Metaverse isn't a new concept, and it certainly isn't one exclusive to the blockchain space. Over the years, there have been plenty of online communities and spaces that fit the brief.In this deep dive, the Queens revisit the metaverses we used to haunt online - from Habbo to Second Life - while also taking a look at the mental health impacts of these spaces. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Metaverse isn't a new concept, and it certainly isn't one exclusive to the blockchain space. Over the years, there have been plenty of online communities and spaces that fit the brief. In this deep dive, the Queens revisit the metaverses we used to haunt online - from Habbo to Second Life - while also taking a look at the mental health impacts of these spaces. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Schauspielerei war Hannah zu prekär, deshalb das Geschichtsstudium. Wir sprechen mit Hannah Rudolph, Doktorandin an der Universität Göttingen. Hannah forscht zum Thema Opfer von terroristischer Gewalt. Wir sprechen mit Hannah über viele Thema aber hauptsächlich geht es in dieser Folge um das Thema Trauma: Was ist Trauma? Wie sprechen wir von Traumata? Wie wird in der Geschichtswissenschaft über das Thema Trauma geforscht? Aber wir sprechen auch über den Umgang von Historiker:innen mit potentiell traumatisierenden Quellen und welche Strategien Hannah hat und der Umgang in der Lehre damit. Quellen 190220 – Ein Jahr nach Hanau: https://open.spotify.com/show/0Z2UJwgGfDnxrIhJpefINW 9/11 Tribute Center: https://911tributemuseum.org/ Brunner, José: Die Politik des Traumas. Gewalterfahrungen und psychisches Leid in den USA, in Deutschland und im Israel/Palästina-Konflikt. Berlin, 2014. Cole, Alyson: The Cult of True Victimhood: From the War on Welfare to the War on Terror. Stanford University Press, 2003. Därmann, Iris: Undienlichkeit. Gewaltgeschichte und politische Philosophie. Berlin, 2020. Foucault; Michel: Überwachen und Strafen. Die Geburt des Gefängnisses. Glynn, Ruth: The ‘turn to the victim' in Italian culture: victim-centred narratives of the anni di piombo, Modern Italy 18:4, November 2013, S. 373 – 390. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13532944.2013.816473 Goltermann, Svenja: Opfer. Die Wahrnehmung von Krieg und Gewalt in der Moderne. Frankfurt am Main, 2017. Hájková, Ana & Contreras, Jazmine: Depression, Antisemitismus und Geschichtsschreibung: In Erinnerung an Evelien Gans, 2022: https://geschichtedergegenwart.ch/depression-antisemitismus-und-geschichtsschreibung-in-erinnerung-an-evelien-gans/ Knoch, Habbo & Möckel, Benjamin: Moral History. Überlegungen zu einer Geschichte des Moralischen im »langen« 20. Jahrhundert, in: Zeithistorische Forschungen/Studies in Contemporary History, Online-Ausgabe, 14 (2017): https://zeithistorische-forschungen.de/1-2017/5454 Hillbrenner, Anke: Gewalt als Sprache der Straße: Terrorismus als Form politischer Kommunikation im Russischen Reich vor 1917. Bonn, 2014. Jensen, Uffa: Zornpolitik. Suhrkamp, 2017. Podcast RAF in Hessen: https://hlz.hessen.de/themen/podcast/die-raf-in-hessen-50-jahre-mai-offensive-1972/ Podcast Terrorismus, Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung: https://www.bpb.de/mediathek/podcasts/terrorismus-strategie-des-schreckens/ Reddy, William M.: Against Constructionism: The Historical Ethnography of Emotions. Current Anthropology 38, 1997, S. 327-351. Robins, James: Can Historians be Traumatized by History? https://newrepublic.com/article/161127/can-historians-traumatized-history Rudolph Hannah & Terhoeven, Petra: Wem gebührt unser Mitleid? https://wem-gebuehrt-unser-mitleid.uni-goettingen.de/podcast-uni-goettingen/ Shnayien, Mary: Sichere Räume, reparative Kritik. Überlegungen zum Arbeiten mit verletzendem Material. In: Zeitschrift für Medienwissenschaft, Jg. 14 (2022), Nr. 1, S. 54–65. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/18126 Tändler, Maik: Das therapeutische Jahrzehnt. Der Psychoboom in den siebziger Jahren. Göttingen, 2016. Petra Terhoeven (Ed.), Victimhood and Acknowledgement: The Other Side of Terrorism, Berlin/Boston 2018. Waldmann, Peter: Terrorismus und Bürgerkrieg. Der Staat in Bedrängnis. München, 2003.
The third season of the podcast is in the making!!! I would love to get your feedback and suggestions (2-min survey): https://www.surveylegend.com/s/47al --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Simonetta joined GameHouse as their new CEO in October last year, to fulfill the mission of becoming the leading provider of casual mobile games for Women. In this episode, Simonetta shares her vision and execution plan to own the "me-time" of the female audience. Prior to joining GameHouse, Simonetta spent the last several years as Head of Spin Master Studios in Los Angeles, and the President, CEO, and Chairwoman of the Board at Woozworld in Montreal. In her earlier career, she was SVP at Sulake, developers of Habbo, the biggest online virtual game for teens where among other roles she led global marketing, community, advertising, and user growth. We are discussing in this new episode: - The new vision and mission of GameHouse under Simonetta's leadership - Why Simonetta, as a female CEO, has a competitive edge in executing the mission of owning the "me-time" of the female market - Simonetta's vision of building a great company culture based on: ownership, flexibility, and data-informed decisions - Why it is important to break the bias about female CEOs Enjoy this new episode! More about GameHouse openings: here
The Metaverse isn't a new concept, and it certainly isn't one exclusive to the blockchain space. Over the years, there have been plenty of online communities and spaces that fit the brief.In this deep dive, the Queens revisit the metaverses we used to haunt online - from Habbo to Second Life - while also taking a look at the mental health impacts of these spaces.Full show notes are on the Queens of the Drone Age website. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Metaverse isn't a new concept, and it certainly isn't one exclusive to the blockchain space. Over the years, there have been plenty of online communities and spaces that fit the brief. In this deep dive, the Queens revisit the metaverses we used to haunt online - from Habbo to Second Life - while also taking a look at the mental health impacts of these spaces. Full show notes are on the Queens of the Drone Age website.
In todays video we are going to talk to you about a new Social-first NFT gaming metaverse. So if you're trying to play and earn in the Metaverse you've come to the right place. Bit Hotel is an online social NFT game that will use Bit Hotel Token (BTH) as its in game currency. Players will collect NFT items and can use them in mini games or display them in their room. Bit Hotel players can purchase NFT hotel rooms on different floors and they range from studio apartments to penthouses with even more options to be released.
After a short few seasons greetings, we return to our same unscripted podcast talking about addicting mobile games, getting banned from online video games, online reselling horror stories, super ironic money art being sold as NFTs and physical pieces.Wordle: https://www.powerlanguage.co.uk/wordle/Wildfire Swap: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1216030/Wildfire_Swap/Neopets: https://www.neopets.comGenshin Impact: https://genshin.mihoyo.com/en/Habbo Hotel: https://habbo.comMeme bank: https://www.memebank.liveRed Hongyi: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hong_Yi
Le 9 février 2007, je publiais un article sur mon blog de l'époque sous le titre « En route pour le web en 3D ». A cette époque, il y avait déjà Second Life, Habbo, Entropia universe et je questionnais mes lecteurs sur ce qui pouvait se passer quand les jeux vidéos se mettent au web 2.0, le web collaboratif. Quand les mondes virtuels se frottent à la réalité. A cette époque, le monde entier ne connaissait pas encore Facebook et seule une petite partie de mes lecteurs avait entendu parler du Metaverse grâce à Snow Crash, le roman de science-fiction paru en 1992, qui se déroule dans un univers futuriste parfois qualifié de postcyberpunk. A cette époque, en février 2007, ce n'était pas facile d'imaginer le futur des metaverse, ces univers virtuels en 3D hébergeant des communautés d'utilisateurs présents sous forme d'avatars pouvant se déplacer et interagir socialement et économiquement. Et puis il y a quelques semaines, branle-bas de combat ! Mark Zuckerberg sort l'artillerie lourde, annonce que son groupe devient désormais Meta et travaille à nous permettre de vivre une double vie dans un monde virtuel où chacun d'entre nous pourrait passer une bonne partie de sa vie, sans avoir à se déplacer. Bien sûr, Facebook n'a pas inventé le concept de Metaverse mais va investir des centaines de millions de dollars pour que ça fonctionne. Alors bien sûr, Mark Zuckerberg n'est pas le seul à pousser ses pions. Pour preuve, lors de sa conférence annuelle, Microsoft a annoncé se lancer aussi dans le metaverse… mais d'une autre façon… Pour bien comprendre ce qui se trame chez les géants de la tech en matière de Metaverse et ce que ça va changer pour les consommateurs, les entreprises, les collaborateurs et même les partenaires, l'invité du podcast est Xavier Perret, le directeur Azure chez Microsoft France. Si ça te dit d'écouter toutes les rencontres du matin sur les plateformes de podcasts traditionnelles, c'est ici https://smartlink.ausha.co/ledigitalpourtous Et pour garder le lien, il y a aussi la newsletter écrite avec amour et garantie sans spam. https://www.getrevue.co/profile/bonjourppc #BonjourPPC #Podcast
Is Your Firewall Actually Protecting You? What Should You Be Doing? New stats are out this week. So what's the number one vector of attack against us? Our Firewalls. And they're failing. So, what's going on. And what can you do about it? [Automated transcript follows] [00:00:16] And of course, I'm always talking about cyber security, because if you ask me that is one of the biggest problems we have in business. [00:00:27] Today. Well, yeah, you got to find employees. In fact, uh, it's almost impossible to find them in the cyber security space as well. And it's been hard for years. So I try to keep you up-to-date here. We've got boot camps that are coming up and you are really going to like them. We've been working on some supplemental materials for it. [00:00:47] And of course these boot camps are always free, so you can join it. You can have your friends come and learn the. Basics. It's not one of these high sell things. Right. I, I got a little letter in the mail this week saying, Hey, you can come and get a free steak dinner. And of course it's kind of like a timeshare, right? [00:01:09] Jay, you have to listen to the pitch. Yes. Stay over. On us. And you are going to be sitting there for four hours listening to this crazy pitch that's going on. That's not what my bootcamps are. Anybody that's been to. One of them will tell you we work on it. I explain it. You know what you have to do, how you have to do it, the wise, the winds, the wherefores. [00:01:35] So if you would like to learn more for yourself, Make sure you sign up Craig peterson.com sign up for my newsletter. And when a bootcamp is coming up, I will be sure to tell you about it in the newsletter so that you can attend. And it's important to, to understand that this is yeah. Aimed at business, the, these boot camps, but almost everything businesses have to do or shouldn't be doing the same thing applies to you in your. [00:02:08] So, if you are a small business person, if you're someone who has some it experience, and you've been assigned to worry about cyber security, this is for you. If you are a very small business and you're kind of the Jack of all trades, and you've got to worry about cybersecurity, this is for you. And I just got. [00:02:31] This week from someone on my email list who is retired and she was talking about her husband and her, they don't have any kids, no errors. They're trying to protect their financial investments. And of course I responded saying, Hey, I'm not a financial investment advisor, but I can certainly give you some cyber security input, which I did. [00:02:53] And you can ask your questions as well. I'm more than glad to hear them. And you probably, if you've sent them in, you know, I always answer them now. My big man, a few days might take me a week, but I will get around to it. And I try and respond to the emails. Sometimes I answered here on the radio show or on my podcast, but usually it's via email me. [00:03:17] At Craig peterson.com. And of course, that's also on my website, Craig peterson.com. And that's also my name Craig Peters on.com. So let's get into the firewall thing. When you have a network, you are connecting that network to your computers, maybe. To your security cameras, to your printers that you have, maybe there's a lock system. [00:03:44] Maybe there's more, all of this stuff is interconnected and it's all rather well and good. You can have a whole lot of fun with it, but it is not as particularly good if you can't get out to the internet. So what do we do? We hook our network, whether it's home or if it's business to the internet. Now, you know, all of this stuff so far, right? [00:04:06] You're following me. The internet is actually inter connected networks. In case you didn't know, there are now millions of networks that are connected on the internet. There are core networks out there. We were my company like number 10,000. I think it was, uh, a S an R a S number autonomous system. So we were fairly early on. [00:04:32] And of course, as you know, I've been on the internet in various forums since the early 1980s and helping to develop the protocols, but it is important to remember it is an interconnected network of networks. You might ask why? Well, the bottom line is you aren't connecting your network with other networks that have malicious software on them. [00:04:58] Maybe they're just poorly configured. Maybe they're causing a denial of service attack effectively because there's so badly configured. But whatever the case may be, you are still exposed. If you look at the traffic that's coming to your router. So your router is sitting at the edge of your network connected to your internet service provider. [00:05:19] So it might be Comcast or Verizon or a whole slew of others. But your network is connected via a router. Then the router knows how do I get my data from the input to the output or from the output to the input, if you will upstream and downstream data, that's what the router is for. And if you look at the data on your router and most of us can't, but if you were able to, what you will see is hundreds of thousands of internet packets coming to, and from your. [00:05:55] Router your endpoint every day. Usually these are bad guys doing what are called scans. They do port scans. They're primarily looking for services. So what do you, do you have a firewall now in many cases, you'll get a device from your Janette service provider that has a router built in and has a firewall built in, and it has wifi. [00:06:19] All of this stuff, all built in together makes life all nice and warm and fuzzy and Catalina, doesn't it. But in reality, it's not necessarily a good thing to have it all in one, because you're definitely not going to get the best of breed and router or firewall or wifi, but that's a different story. What is that firewall for that router? [00:06:41] Of course, it's getting all this internet traffic and anything that's on the internet that is. I'm trying to get to you is going to go through the. And anything that you are trying to send up to the internet, like for instance, to try and get a web page or something is also going to go up through that router. [00:07:02] So how do you protect yourself time? Was that there wasn't really much of a way to protect yourself. And frankly, there weren't a lot of reasons. To try and protect yourself. And the internet was just this wonderful open thing, lots of fun and played around a lot. Back in the early nineties, it was, it was just a joy in the late eighties to, to be connected up to the internet and then bad guys started doing bad things. [00:07:30] We took the concept of what you have in an automobile and applied it to the. If you're driving your car, your in the passenger compartment and that passenger compartment is hopefully warm in the winter and cool in the summertime. And you are protected from that big mean nasty engine that's in front of you, or if you're driving an electric car from those mean nasty batteries that are probably below you in that car and what's between you and the. [00:08:04] Of course a firewall. And the idea is to keep the nastiness of that engine, all of the heat, the oil, the grime, the wind, everything else is associated with that engine. Keep that away from you so that you can now drive that car just comfortably in that controlled climate of the passenger compartment, that concept was then applied to the inter. [00:08:30] And in fact, I designed and implemented one of the first firewalls ever made way back when and the firewall in the internet Partland is very similar to the car in the car. You have some protrusions through that fire. Don't you, you you've got a steering wheel. How does that get up to the front of the car? [00:08:53] Well, it goes through the firewall and around that steering wheel, of course there's some EBDM, some rubber type stuff that helps stop anything from coming through right next to that steering column. Same, thing's true with the brake pedal and the gas pedal. At least it used to be. Nowadays, it's so much of this as drive by wire, that the only thing going through the firewall is a wire and there's no mechanical linkage. [00:09:24] Unlike my car, which is a 1980 Mercedes-Benz diesel. Where yes, indeed. Direct linkages to everything. So the firewall in the cars protecting you from the nastiness in the engine compartment and the firewall, when it comes to your internet is doing something very similar. Think about your house for a minute, you have a house with doors and windows. [00:09:53] I would hope. And a chimney and maybe a couple of other protrusions that are going outside of the house. Well, you have some similar problems and when it comes to the internet and when it comes to the firewall, With your house, sir. Sure. You could post a guard out front, a whole series of them. You've got a dozen guards out front and they are all guarding that front door. [00:10:19] But if no, one's watching the back door, if no one's paying attention to the windows, there's still ways for the bad guys to get in. And that's what we're going to talk about. How does the internet firewall tie into this analogy of cars and the analogy of your home? Because it's a very important point when you get right down to it. [00:10:44] We need to understand this because the number one tactic reported this week by MITRE and Cisco is exploitation of public facing application. So I'm going to explain what that is. What's your firewall can do for you and what you should do for your firewall. A stick around. We've got a lot more coming up. [00:11:09] I want to invite you to go. Of course, right now, online to Craig peterson.com. Once you're there, just sign up for mind's newsletter. Simple Craig peterson.com. [00:11:25] This week, we found out what the top five tactics are that are most frequently being used by bad guys to attack us. This is done by MITRE and Cisco systems. Number one, public facing applications. What does that mean? [00:11:42] We've been talking about this report, but really what we've been delving into is how data flows on your network, whether it's a home network or maybe it's a business network, how does this whole mess work? [00:11:58] And when miters talks about the biggest problem here, 91% of the time being what's called an exploit of a public facing application, what does that mean? We went through the basics of a firewall and a router. So all of the data coming from the internet, coming into the router, then handed to the firewall. [00:12:24] Any data going out, goes into the firewall. And then the. So that's the pretty simplistic version. And of course the firewall on your network does a similar thing to the firewall in your car. It stops the bad stuff, at least it's supposed to, but your home and your car both have different ways of getting. [00:12:48] Past the firewall in the house. It's your doors and your windows in the car. Of course, it's where the steering column goes through where the brake pedal and the gas pedal go through the clutch, all of that stuff that perch, um, permeates, it goes through. That firewall. And of course, you've probably, if you're been around for awhile, you've had leaks coming through your firewall and, uh, you know, how poorest they can be sometimes. [00:13:18] Well, we have the same type of thing on our internet firewalls. Every home has doors and what we call the doors in on the internet is similar to what they call them. On the, in the Navy, on the water, the reports. So think about a porthole in a boat, or think about a, a door, a port, which is the French word for door. [00:13:45] What happens on the internet? For instance, if you're trying to connect to Craig peterson.com, you are going to connect to a specific port on my server. So the address typically, uh, is going to be resolved by DNS. And then once it gets to the server, you can connect to port 4 43. You might try and connect to port 80, but I'll do a redirect, but that's neither here nor there. [00:14:12] So you're going to connect to that port four 40. So my firewall has to say, Hey, if somebody is coming in and wants to get to port 4 43, which is called a well-known port, that's the port that all web server. Listen on. So if someone's trying to get to my port, my web server on port 4 43, let them in. But if someone's trying to get to another port, don't let them in. [00:14:48] Now there's multiple ways to respond or not respond. I can talk about that right now. That'd be for deep dive workshop, but the idea is. Each application that you are connecting to, or that your providing has. Part of the problem that we've been seen. And this is a very big problem is that people are not changing the administrative passwords on their machines. [00:15:20] So administrative passwords mean things like admin for the username and admin for the password on your firewall. So. Your firewall, if you have what's called when admin enabled, what that means is someone on the wide area network. In other words, The internet, someone on the internet or on the, when can connect to your firewall and control it. [00:15:51] This is, as you can imagine, a very big thing, and it is something that we cover in one of our workshops, explained it all and all of the details and what to do, but most businesses and most people have not properly configured their firewalls. When we're talking about number one, problem, 91% of the time being an exploit against public facing applications. [00:16:18] What that means is they could very well just be trying to connect to the administrative interface on your firewall. Unfortunately, they will often offer. Change the software on your firewall. So they won't just reconfigure. They'll just change it entirely. And they'll do all kinds of evil things. Again, we're not going to get into all of that and what to look for and what can happen. [00:16:44] But number one thing everybody's got to do, and I saw some stats this week as well, that made me want to bring the. Most people and most businesses about two thirds have not changed the default passwords on the hardware that they have. Now it can understand sometimes the kids confusing. No question about. [00:17:07] But if you don't change the password on something that's public facing, in other words, something that can be reached from the internet or again, the wide area network. I know there's a lot of terms for this, but something that someone else can get at from outside your network. And it's the default password like admin admin, you could be in a whole lot of. [00:17:35] So check that right now, please double check that triple check that because even if you have a router from a big internet service provider, again, like the Comcast Verizon's, et cetera of the world, they will almost always have it set up. So you can change that administrative password and Jewish. Now I, again, for clients, I have some different advice than I have for, for just regular users, but make sure you change that. [00:18:09] And here's the second part of the problem. What happens if you have a business and let's say you're not hosting your own website, like I've been doing for a couple of decades and how three 30 years, I guess now. Um, and so you've got your website hosted at some. Web height site, hosting place, you know, Gator or one eye and one eye and one or GoDaddy or whatever. [00:18:35] Okay. So, okay. That's fine. So let's not inside our network. Uh, w we don't worry about the security because that's the vendor's problem. Now we're talking about, okay, what happens. My users who need to work from home. This gets to be a very big problem for so many people, because work from home is important. [00:19:00] So what are you going to do? Well, basically in most cases, unfortunately, businesses are just exposing an application to the internet. So they might, they might. Terribly configured networks, where there is a direct connection that goes right to the files. So you connect to a port on their firewall and it immediately redirects it internally. [00:19:30] Remaps it to the file server. And some people are really, really clever. Alright. Or so they think, because what they'll do is they'll say, okay, well, you know, that, that normal port number. Okay. So I'm going to move. Port number. So you're going to connect to port 17, 17 on my firewall, and it's going to connect you to the file share on my file server so that people from home can just connect to port 17, 17, and ta-da, there are all the files and yeah, we're, we're using passwords, so it'll be okay. [00:20:06] It'll be fine. Um, but, uh, guess what it isn't for a few. Different reasons are we're going to be talking about those here in just a minute. Yeah, I want to encourage you right now. Take a minute. Go online. Craig peterson.com. You'll find lots of information there. I've got 3,500 articles, all searchable, Craig peterson.com. [00:20:32] But more importantly, make sure you sign up for my newsletter. Craig peterson.com/subscribe. So that you can keep up to date on everything that is important in all of our lives. [00:20:51] We're talking about firewalls at home at the office, what it means to have public facing services, really applications, people working from home. How can you make it easy for them and hard for the bad guy? [00:21:15] Many businesses had to quickly change the way their computers were set up because of course the lockdown and people working from home. [00:21:26] And, um, unfortunately. Many mistakes were made. And some of this, in fact, I'm going to talk a lot of this problem up to these managed services providers break, fix shops. My, my fellow information technology contractors, if you will, because they didn't know any. Most of these people have been computer people, their whole lives, right. [00:21:55] They played with PCs when they were young and they might've taken a course or two and wow. MCSC certified. Believe me, this is not something that a straight up MCSC or. And frankly, most of the it certifications can really understand or really handle the cybersecurity can be done, but there's so many things they overlook just like what I was just talking about, exposing a file server directly to the internet. [00:22:29] I mentioned, okay. While they thought it was going to be safe because there's a username and password, but there's a couple of huge problems here. Problem. Number one. When you're exposing a service to the internet, like for instance, the files server, you are exposing software that may have exploitable, but. [00:22:54] And again, going back to those stats from earlier this week, more than half of all of the systems that are out there are not patched to date. It's so bad that president Biden just ordered the federal government agencies to apply patches some as old as three years. So what happens now? Well, the bad guy scan, and guess what they found. [00:23:23] Port that you thought was just so clever because it wasn't the standard port number for that service. Maybe it's SMB or CIFS or something else. And, uh, they found it because they scan, they look, they see what the response is that tells them what type of a server sitting there. And then they try, well, let me see. [00:23:45] There's the zero day exploits, but why bother with those? Let's just start with the good old standard ones. And unfortunately, because so many machines are not patched up at all, let alone properly patched up. You, they end up getting into the machine. It's really that simple, just because it's not patched up. [00:24:08] How does that sound? Huh? Yeah, it's just plain, not patched up. It's not available for anyone to be able to use anybody to be able to access. Right. It there it's not restricted. So the passwords don't matter if you haven't patched your systems. And then the second problem is that. Are brute force attacks against so many servers out there. [00:24:36] And most of the time, what we're talking about is Microsoft, but, you know, there's the share of bugs kind of goes around, but Microsoft and really, they get nailed a lot more than most beet, mainly because they're probably the number one out there that's in use today, not in the server community, certainly, but certainly also in the. [00:24:59] It's been, you know, small businesses, that's all they know. So they just run a Microsoft server and more and more, you kind of have to run it because I, I get it. You know, there's so many apps that depend on the various functions that are provided by the active directory server at Microsoft and stuff. So we, we do that for our customers as well. [00:25:19] So are you starting to see why the brute force against a server will often get them in and the smarter guys figure out what the business is? And then they go to the dark web and they look up those business emails. Addresses that they have that have been stolen along with the passwords that were used. [00:25:43] That's why we keep saying, use a different password on every site because that stolen password now. Is going to be tried against your service, your, your file server. That might be there. You might be trying to have a VPN service that the people are VPN in from home. You might have remote desktop, which has been. [00:26:08] Abject failure when it comes to cybersecurity, it's just been absolutely terrible. So you might have any of those types of things. And if they've got your email address and they've got the passwords you've used on other sites, which they've stolen and they try them, are they going to work? Odds are yes, because most people, I got another set of stats this week. [00:26:36] Most people use the same password for every site out there or every type of site. So they might get a second, most common is they use one password for all of their social media sites. They use another one for all of their banking sites. So we cover this in some depth in our bootcamp so that you understand how to do the whole password thing. [00:27:03] And what I recommend is a piece of software called one password. I don't recommend that you just use one password for everything. I was misunderstood by someone the other day. You mean just w w I use one password for everything. Yeah, you do. And then I talked to them a little bit more because I thought that was an odd question. [00:27:24] And it turned out, he was thinking, you just have the one password, like, like, you know, P at sign SSW, zero RD. Right? You use that everywhere. No, there's a piece of software go to one password.com. That's what I recommend as a password manager. And I show you how to use that and how to use it effectively in my bootcamp. [00:27:48] Absolutely free. Just like the radio is free. I'm trying to get the information out to as many people as possible, but you gotta be on my list. Craig peterson.com. Make sure you go there. So I've explained the basics here of what happens. We have a door open or windows, open ports on our servers, on our firewalls at home. [00:28:15] And at work. So the thing to do, particularly if you're a business, but even if your home user is check that firewall configuration. And let me tell you something that probably won't come as a surprise. Most of these internet server. The providers are in the business to make as much money as possible. And cybersecurity is very much secondary. [00:28:40] They know they talk about it and they talk about software defined networks and things that sound really cool. But in reality, what they give you is. Configured very well and is going to expose you. So make sure you go in, they will set it up. For instance, if they're providing you with television services, they'll set it up so that they can just bypass your firewall and get into the cable box that they installed in your house. [00:29:09] Yeah. Obviously that's not something they should be doing because now they are opening you up to attack. What happens when there's a cybersecurity problem with the cable box? We've seen this problem too, with television vendors where they poke a hole out through your firewall so that they can then gather statistics and do firmer updates and everything else. [00:29:34] It's insane. It really is. These vendors are not thinking about you. They're not thinking about the consequences. It is a very, very sad situation, but now you know what to do and how to do it. Okay. I explained today, firewalls. I explained router. I explained ports, which should be open, which should not be open. [00:29:58] And the reasons why I even mentioned passwords, I get into that in a lot of detail in my bootcamp, Craig peterson.com to get on that waiting list. Craig peterson.com, just subscribe and you'll be kept up to date. [00:30:14] There has been a whole lot of discussion lately about Metta. You might've heard. In fact, you probably did that. Facebook changed its name to Metta and they're aiming for something called the metaverse. So what is it exactly and what's it going to do for or to you? [00:30:32] The metaverse oh my gosh. I had a great discussion this week about the metaverse this came out in, um, and originally anyways, in this novel called the what was it now? [00:30:47] A snow crash. That's what it was 1992, Neil. Stevenson or Steffenson. I'm not sure how he pronounces it, but in this book, which was a cyberpunk model and I've, I've always thought cyber punk was cool. Uh, is the metal versus an imaginary place that's made available to the public over the world wide fiber optics network. [00:31:13] And it's projected onto virtual reality goggles sound familiar yet. And in the. You can build a buildings park signs as well as things that do not exist. In reality, such as vast hovering overhead light show, special neighborhoods were three where the rules of three-dimensional spacetime are ignored and free combat zones where people can go hunt and kill each other. [00:31:42] Great article about this in ARS Technica this week. And, uh, that was a little quote from the book and from the article. Phenomenal idea. Well, if you have read or seen the movie ready player one, and I have seen the movie, but a friend of mine this week said the book is so much better. So I'm going to have to read that book, ready player one. [00:32:06] But in it, you have these people living in. Dystopian future where everything is badly worn down, the mega cities, people building on top of each other and they get their entertainment and relaxation and even make money in. Prison time by being inside this virtual world, they can go anywhere, do anything and play games, or just have fun. [00:32:39] One of the vendors that we work with at my company mainstream has this kind of a virtual reality thing for. I kind of a summit, so people can go and watch this presentation and I think it's stupid, but they, you walk in. And it's, uh, this is just on a screen. They're not using like those Oculus 3d graph glasses, but you walk into an auditorium. [00:33:13] So you've got to make your little avatar walked on. Dun dun, dun dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, and then go to an empty seat. And then you have to make your avatar sit down. Right? I, I have never played a game like this. I never played second life. Never any of that sort of thing. It was kind of crazy to me. And then I was doing a presentation, so I had to go Dundon then, then, then the, up onto the rostrum there and stand behind the podium and, and then put my slides up on this virtual screen. [00:33:49] It was ridiculous. I have a full television production studio here in my, in my lab. Right. And that's, this is where I do the radio show. This is where I do my television appearances. This is where I do pretty much everything. Right. And so what I can do is I can split screen with my face, with the desktop. [00:34:12] You can see my desktop, I can draw on it, circle things, highlight things or whatever I want to do. Right. But no, no, no, no. I was in their virtual reality. And so all I could do is. I have the slides come up. In fact, I had prepared beforehand, pre-taped it? A, the whole presentation, but I couldn't play that video. [00:34:37] No, no, no. I had to show a slide deck, you know, death by PowerPoint. I'm sure you've been there before. It's very, very frustrating in case you can tell for me, well, we've seen this type of thing. I mentioned some of the things like that. I'm in second life. I'm sure you've heard of that before. Sims is another one you've probably heard of before. [00:35:01] These types of semi metaverses have been around a very long time. And, and in fact, all the way on back to the nineties is Habbo hotel. G I don't know if you ever heard of that thing, but it was non-line gaming and social space. I helped to develop one for a client of mine back in the early nineties. [00:35:23] Didn't really go very far. I think it was ahead of its time. It's it's interesting right now, enter. Mark Zuckerberg. Do you remember a few years ago, mark Zuckerberg had a presentation. He was going to make this huge announcement, right? They bought Oculus. What was it? It was like crazy amount of money. And then he came in the back of the hall. [00:35:50] And nobody noticed he walked all the way up to the front and nobody even saw him because they were all wearing these 3d glasses. And of course, today they are huge. They are awkward and they don't look that great, the pictures inside, but the idea is you can move your head around and the figures move as your head moves, almost like you're in the real world. [00:36:13] And that's kind of cool and people thought it was kind of cool and they didn't see Zuckerberg because they all had these things on. And the inside was playing a little presentation about what Facebook was going to do with Oculus. Well, they just killed off the Oculus name anyways here a couple of weeks ago, over at Facebook about the same time that got rid of the Facebook name and went to meta. [00:36:39] The Facebook product is so-called Facebook and it appears what they are going to be doing is taking the concept of a metaverse much, much further than anyone has ever taken it before. They're planning on there's speculation here. Okay. So, you know, don't obviously I don't get invested. I don't give investment advice, investment advice. [00:37:10] Um, but I do talk about technology and, uh, I've been usually five to 10 years. I had so take that as well. They as the grain of salt, but I think what they're planning on doing is Facebook wants to become the foundation for Mehta versus think about things like world of Warcraft, where you've got the. Gain that people are playing. [00:37:39] And it's a virtual reality, basically, right? It might be two D, but some of it's moving into the three-dimensional world. Other games like Minecraft and roadblocks, they have some pretty simple building blocks that people can use network effects and play your creativity to make your little world and the ability. [00:38:04] To exchange and or sell your virtual property. That's where I think Mr. Zuckerberg is getting really interested now because if they can build the platform that everybody else the wants to have a virtual world builds their virtual world on top of. Man, do they have a moneymaker? Now? People like me, we're going to look at this and just poo poo it. [00:38:35] I I'm sure I'm absolutely sure, because it will be another 20 years before you really think it's. You know, some of these scifi shows have talked about it. You know, you can feel someone touching you, et cetera, et cetera. Yeah. That's going to be very crude for a very long time. And now CGI is pretty good. [00:38:57] Yeah. You watch the movies. CGI is great, but that takes weeks worth of rendering time on huge farms, clusters of servers. So it's going to take quite a while. Looking at the normal advancement of technology before this really becomes real. Now there have also been us court cases over who owns what in bad happened with Eve online. [00:39:28] Second life where disagreements over player ownership of the virtual land created by the publisher, which was Linden labs. When. And I've also mentioned in the past how our friends over at the IRS have tried to tax some of the land that you own inside these virtual worlds. So ownership, do you really own it? [00:39:55] Does it really exist? What would non fungible tokens maybe it does. And these non fungible tokens are. Basically just a check, some verification, I'm really oversimplifying of some sort of a digital something rather lately. And initially it was mostly pictures. And so you had a picture of something and you owned that and you could prove it because of the blockchain behind it. [00:40:27] But I think this is where he's really interested because if he can build the base platform. Let the developers come up with the rules of what's it called it a game and come up with what the properties look like and how people can trade them and sell them and what kind of upgrades they can get. Right. [00:40:48] So let's nothing Zuckerberg has to worry about. Uh, Metta or Zuckerberg then worries about, okay. So how do we collect money for these? How do we check with the transactions? Uh, somebody wants to buy those sort of Damocles. How does that transaction work and how do we Facebook Metta? How do we get a slice of the act? [00:41:16] You got to believe that that's where things are going. And if they have the ability to make this base platform and be able to take characters from one part of a developer to another part of the developer, you could have worlds where Gandalf might be fighting bugs bunny. Right? Interesting. Interesting and Warner brothers, all these movie companies would probably be coming out with complete virtual reality. [00:41:49] So when you're watching James Bond, you're not just watching James Bond, you can look around, you can see what's happening. People sneaking up behind. And ultimately you could be James Bond, but that's decades away. I think a good 20 years. All right, everybody. Thanks for sticking around here. Make sure you go online. [00:42:11] Craig peterson.com/subscribe. Get my weekly newsletter. Find out about these free boot camps and other things that I have. So we can keep you up to date and keep you safe. [00:42:25] We already talked about Metta and their name, change the metaverse, but there's something else. Facebook did this last week that surprised a lot of users, something they started in 2010, but has been controversial ever since. [00:42:41] We had a pretty big announcement, frankly, this last week from our friends over at Facebook, not the one where they change their name and the. [00:42:51] Basically trying to create a metaverse platform. That's going to be the one platform that rules the world. Although those are my words by the way. But Facebook has announced plans now to shut down a decade old. Facial recognition system this month. We'll see what they do with this. If they follow through entirely, but they're planning on deleting over 1 billion faces that they have already gone through and analyzed. [00:43:26] You might remember. In 2010, Facebook had a brand new feature. It started announcing, Hey, did you know that so-and-so just posted your picture? Is this you? Is this your friend, is this sewn? So do you remember all of those questions? If you're a Facebook user back in the day? Well, they were automatically identifying people who appeared in digital photos and suggested that users or users tagged them with a click we're going to get to and admitted here. [00:43:57] Uh, and of course that then linked the Facebook account for. The picture that you tagged to the images and let that person know. And of course Facebook's ultimate goal is to get you to stay on long, as long online, as long as possible. Because if you're online, you are going to be looking at ads that are aimed primarily at. [00:44:18] Well, facial recognition has been a problem. We've seen it a worldwide. I just read through a restatement from the electronic frontier foundation, talking about facial recognition and the problems with it, how some people have been arrested based on facial recognition and held for over a day. We'll have cases where the police use to kind of a crummy photograph of them from a surveillance video sometimes also from a police car, in some areas, the police cars are continually taking video and uploading it to the internet, looking for things like license plates, to see if a car. [00:45:00] Parking ticket that hasn't been paid or it hasn't paid us registration all the way through looking at faces, who is this person? And some in law enforcement have kind of thought it would be great to have kind of like Robocop. You remember Robocop, not the ed 2 0 9. There was also in that movie. That's also very scary, but when they look at someone who's on a street at autonomous. [00:45:24] Pops up in their glasses, who it is, any criminal record, if there any sort of a threat to et cetera. And I can understand that from the policemen standpoint. And I interviewed out at the consumer electronic show, a manufacturer of. That technology, it was kind of big and bulky at the time. This was probably about six or eight years ago, but nowadays you're talking about something that's kind of Google glass size, although that's kind of gone by the wayside too. [00:45:54] There are others that are out there that you. Facial recognition. Technology has really advanced in its ability to identify people, but you still get false positives and false negatives. And that's where part of the problem becomes from they have been taking and they been private companies primarily, but also some government agencies they've been taking pictures from. [00:46:21] They can find them. We've talked about Clearview AI before this is a company that literally stole pitchers, that it could get off the internet. They scan through Facebook, Instagram, everywhere. They could find faces and they tied it all back in. They did facial recognition. On all of those photos that they had taken and then sold the data to law enforcement agencies. [00:46:49] There's an app you can get from Clearview AI. That runs on your smartphone and you can take a picture of someone in the street, clear view. AI will run that face through their database and we'll tell you who it is, what their, what their background is, where their LinkedIn page is their Facebook page, wherever it found them online. [00:47:13] Basically what they've been doing. Now Clearview had a problem here this last couple of weeks because the Australian government ordered them to delete all facial recognition, data belonging, to anyone that lives. In Australia. Now that's going to be a bit of a problem for clear view, because it's hard to identify exactly where people live just based on a photograph. [00:47:40] And the United Kingdom is also considering doing this exact same thing. Now, clear views have been sued. They violated the terms of service from Facebook and some of these other sites that I mentioned, but they did it anyway. And clear view was. To destroy all the facial images and facial templates they had retrieved about any Australian. [00:48:08] I think that's probably a pretty good idea. I don't like the idea of this data being out there. Well, if your password is stolen and we're going to be talking about that in our bootcamp, coming up here in a couple of weeks about how to determine if your username or your password is stolen. But, uh, and of course, if you want to get that. [00:48:29] Bootcamp and go to that. There's no charge for it, but you have to know about it. And the only way is to sign up. You have to make sure you're on my email list@craigpeterson.com. But what happens when your email address is stolen or your password, or both are stolen from a web. Oh, typically they end up on the dark web. [00:48:50] They sell personal identification for very little money. In some cases it's only a few dollars per thousand people's identities. It is absolutely crazy. So the bad guys are looking for that information, but you can change your password. You can change your email address, but if your facial information is stolen, Can't change your face. [00:49:18] If your eye print is stolen, you can't change your eye. I have a friend who's pretty excited because he got to go right through the security at the airport ever so quickly. Cause all they had to do was scan his eyeball. Well, that data is valuable data because it cannot be changed. And it can, in some cases be replicated. [00:49:41] In fact, the department of Homeland security and the transportation safety administration had the database of face print stolen from them in 2019. To about 200,000 people's identities were stolen, the face sprints. It's just absolutely crazy. And this was some, a vendor of us customs and border protection. [00:50:05] And it, it, you can't write down to it. I read the detailed report on it just now. And the report that came out of the federal government said, well, it went to a contractor who. Took the data, all of the face prints off site over to their own site. And it wasn't encrypted when they took it over there. But it does mention that it was taken from an un-encrypted system at customs and border protection. [00:50:34] So wait a minute. Now you're blaming the contractor that you hired because it wasn't encrypted and yet you didn't encrypt it yourself either. I, you know, I guess that kind of goes around, but they want to. They want your biometric information just as much as they want anything else. Think about your phones. [00:50:53] Nowadays, apple has done a very good job with the biometrics and the fingerprints and making sure that that information is only ever stored on the phone. It never goes to apple, never leaves the phone it's in what apple calls, the secure long term. And if you mess with it at all, it destroys itself, which is part of the problem with replacing a cracked screen yourself on an iPhone, because you're going to disturb that secure enclave and the phone will no longer work. [00:51:24] That is not true when it comes to many other devices, including most of your Android phones that are out there. It is. So if the bad guys have. Your face print, they, and they can create 3d models that can and do in fact, go ahead and fool it into letting you in that that's information they want. So why are we allowing these companies to like clear view AI? [00:51:52] And others to buy our driver's license photos to the federal government, to also by the way, by our driver's license photos, by them from other sites and also our passport information. It's getting kind of scary, especially when you look into. China has a social credit system. And the Biden administration has made rumblings about the same here in the U S but in China, what they're doing is they have cameras all over the place and your faces. [00:52:27] And they can identify you. So if you jaywalk, they take so many points off of your social credit. If you don't do something that they want you to do or be somewhere, they want you to be, you lose credits again, and you can gain them as well by doing various things that the government wants you to do. And. [00:52:49] And ultimately, if you don't have enough social credit, you can't even get on a train to get to work. But the real bad part are the users. This is a minority in China and China's authorities are using. Us facial recognition, technology and artificial intelligence technology. Hey, thanks Google for moving your artificial intelligence lab to China in order to control and track the users. [00:53:19] Absolutely amazing in the United States law enforcement is using this type of software to aid policing, and we've already seen problems of overreach and mistaken IRS. So Facebook to you're leading a billion of these frameworks. If you will, of people's faces biometrics. Good for them. Hopefully this will continue a tread elsewhere. [00:53:46] Well, we've talked a little bit today about firewalls, what they do, how your network is set up. If you miss that, make sure you catch up online. My podcast@craigpeterson.com, but there's a whole new term out there that is changing security. [00:54:03] It's difficult to set up a secure network. [00:54:07] Let's just say mostly secure because if there's a power plug going into it, there's probably a security issue, but it's difficult to do that. And historically, what we've done is we've segmented the networks. So we have various devices that. Maybe be a little more harmful and on one network, other devices at a different level of security and many businesses that we've worked with, we have five different networks each with its own level of secure. [00:54:38] And in order to get from one part of the network, for instance, let's say you're an accounting and you want to get to the accounting file server. We make sure your machine is allowed access at the network level. And then obviously on top of that, you've got usernames and passwords. Maybe you've got multifactor authentication or something else. [00:54:59] I'll make sense, doesn't it? Well, the new move today is to kind of move away from that somewhat. And instead of having a machine or a network have firewall rules to get to a different network or different machine within an organization. There's something called zero trust. So again, think of it. You've, you've got a network that just has salespeople on it. [00:55:25] You have another network that might have just your accounting people. Another network has your administrative people and other network has your software developers, et cetera. So all of these networks are separate from each other and they're all firewalled from each other. So that only for instance, at county people can get to the accounting server. [00:55:44] Okay, et cetera. Right? The sales guys can enter the sales data and the programmers can get at their programs. And maybe the servers that are running their virtual machines are doing testing on what was zero trust. It is substantially different. What they're doing with zero trust is assuming that you always have to be authentic. [00:56:11] So instead of traditional security, where, where you're coming from helps to determine your level of access, you are assuming that basically no units of trust. So I don't care where you're coming from. If you are on a machine in the accounting department, We want to verify a lot of other information before we grant you access. [00:56:38] So that information probably does include what network you're on. Probably does include the machine you're on, but it's going to all. You as a user. So you're going to have a username. You're going to have an ID. You're going to have a multi-factor authentication. And then we're going to know specifically what your job is and what you need to have specific access. [00:57:04] Because this follows the overall principle of least privilege to get your job done. Now you might've thought in the past that, oh my gosh, these firewalls, they're just so annoying. It's just so difficult to be able to do anything right. Well, zero trust is really going to get your attention. If that's what you've been saying. [00:57:23] But here's an example of the traditional security approach. If you're in the office, you get access to the full network. Cause that's pretty common, right? That's not what we've been doing, but that's pretty common where we have been kind of working in the middle between zero trust and this traditional you're in the office. [00:57:41] So you can potentially get it. Everything that's on the off. And if you're at home while all you have to do is access a specific portal, or as I've explained before, well, you are just connecting to an IP address in a hidden port, which won't remain hidden for. So maybe in a traditional security approach, the bouncer checks your ID. [00:58:08] You can go anywhere inside this club and it's multi floor, right. But in a zero trust approach, getting into the club, having that bouncer look at your ID is only the first check, the bartender or the waiter. They also have to check your ID before you could be served. No matter where you are in the club and that's kind of how they do it right now, though, they'll make a mark on your hand or they'll stamp it. [00:58:35] And now they know, okay, this person cannot get a drink for instance. So think of it that way, where every resource that's available inside the business independently checks whether or not you should have access to. This is the next level of security. It's something that most businesses are starting to move towards. [00:58:57] I'm talking about the bigger guys, the guys that have had to deal with cybersecurity for awhile, not just the people who have a small business, most small businesses have that flat network that. Again about right. The traditional security approach of all you're in the office. So yeah, you can get at anything. [00:59:15] It doesn't matter. And then you, you have the sales guys walking out with your client list and who knows what else is going on? Think of Ferris, Bueller, where he was updating his grades and miss days at high school, from his home computer. And you've got an idea of why you might want to secure. You are network internally because of, again, those internal threats. [00:59:40] So keep an eye out for it. If you're looking to replace your network, obviously this is something that we've had a lot of experience with. Cisco is probably the best one out there for this, but there are a few other vendors that are pretty good. If you want to drop me an email, I'll put together a list of some of the top tier zero. [01:00:02] Providers so that you can look at those. I don't have one right now, but I'd be glad to just email me M e@craigpeterson.com. We can point you in the right direction, but if you have an it person or department, or whether you outsource it to an MSP, a managed services provider, make sure you have the discussion with them about zero. [01:00:28] Now, when I'm looking at security, I'm concerned about a bunch of things. So let me tell you something that Karen and I have been working on the last, oh man, few weeks. I mentioned the boot camp earlier in the show today. And one of the things that we're going to do for those people that attend the bootcamp is I think incredible. [01:00:49] This has taken Karen so much time to dig up. Once she's done is she's worked with me to figure out what are the things that you need to keep tabs on. Now, again, this is aimed primarily at businesses, but let me tell you, this is going to be great for home users as well. And we've put together this list of what you should be doing. [01:01:15] About cybersecurity every week. And in fact, a couple of things that are daily, but every week, every month, every quarter, every six months and every year, it's a full checklist. So you can take this and sit down with it and, you know, okay. So I have to do these things this week and this isn't. Response to anything in particular, it does meet most requirements, but frankly, it's something that every business should be doing when it comes to the cybersecurity. [01:01:53] It includes things like passwords. Are they being done? Right? Did you do some training with your employees on fishing or a few other topics all the way on down to make sure you got some canned air and blew out the fan? In your workstations, you'd be amazed at how dirty they get. And he is the enemy of computers that makes them just fail much, much faster than, than 82, same thing with server. [01:02:22] So it is everything. It is a lot of pages and it is just check she'd made it nice and big. Right. So even I can read it. But it's little check marks that you can mark on doing while you're going through it. So we're doing some more work on that. She's got the first couple of iterations done. We're going to do a couple more, make sure it is completely what you would need in order to help keep your cyber security in. [01:02:50] But the only way you're going to get it is if you are in the BR the bootcamp absolutely free. So it was this list, or of course you won't find out unless you are on my email list. Craig Peterson.com/subscribe. [01:03:06] One of the questions I get asked pretty frequently has to do with artificial intelligence and robots. Where are we going? What are we going to see first? What is the technology that's first going to get into our businesses and our homes. [01:03:22] Artificial intelligence is something that isn't even very well-defined there's machine learning and there's artificial intelligence. [01:03:33] Some people put machine learning as a subset of artificial intelligence. Other people kind of mess around with it and do it the other way. I tend to think that artificial intelligence is kind of the top of the heap, if you will. And that machine learning is a little bit further down because machines can be programmed to learn. [01:03:54] For instance, look at your robot, your eye robot cleans the floor, cleans the carpet. It moves around. It has sensors and it learned, Hey, I have to turn here. Now. I robot is actually pretty much randomly drew. But there are some other little vacuum robots that, that do learn the makeup of your house. The reason for the randomization is while chairs move people, move things, move. [01:04:22] So trying to count on the house, being exactly the same every time isn't isn't exactly right. Uh, by the way, a lot of those little vacuums that are running around are also sending data about your house, up to the manufacturer in the. So they often will know how big the house is. They know where it's located because you're using the app for their robot. [01:04:47] And that, of course it has access to GPS, et cetera, et cetera. Right. But where are we going? Obviously, the little by robot, the little vacuum does not need much intelligence to do what it's doing, but one of the pursuits that we've had for. Really since the late nineties for 20, 25 years are what are called follower robots. [01:05:13] And that's when I think we're going to start seeing much more frequently, it's going to be kind of the first, um, I called it machine learning. They call it artificial intelligence who you really could argue either one of them, but there's a little device called a Piaggio fast forward. And it is really kind of cool. [01:05:34] Think of it almost like R2D2 or BB eight from star wars following you around. It's frankly, a little hard to do. And I want to point out right now, a robot that came out, I think it was last year from Amazon is called the Astro robot. And you might remember Astro from the Jetsons and. This little robot was available in limited quantities. [01:06:01] I'm looking at a picture of it right now. It, frankly, Astro is quite cute. It's got two front wheels, one little toggle wheel in the back. It's got cameras. It has a display that kind of makes it look like kids are face, has got two eyeballs on them. And the main idea behind this robot is that it will. [01:06:23] Provide some protection for your home. So it has a telescoping camera and sensor that goes up out of its head up fairly high, probably about three or four feet up looking at this picture. And it walks around your one rolls around your home, scanning for things that are out of the normal listening for things like windows breaking there, there's all kinds of security. [01:06:50] That's rolled into some of these. But it is a robot and it is kind of cool, but it's not great. It's not absolutely fantastic. Amazon's dubbing the technology it's using for Astro intelligent motion. So it's using location and mapping data to make sure that Astro. Gets around without crashing into things. [01:07:18] Unlike that little vacuum cleaner that you have, because if someone loves something on the floor that wasn't there before, they don't want to run over it, they don't want to cause harm. They don't want to run into your cats and dogs. And oh my maybe lions and bears too. But, uh, they're also using this computer vision technology called visual ID and that is used. [01:07:41] With facial recognition, drum roll, please, to recognize specific members of the family. So it's kind of like the dog right in the house. It's sitting there barking until it recognizes who you are, but Astro, in this case, Recognizes you and then provide you with messages and reminders can even bring you the remote or something else and you just drop it in the bin and off it goes. [01:08:08] But what I am looking at now with this Piaggio fast forward, you might want to look it up online, cause it's really. Cool is it does the following, like we've talked about here following you around and doing things, but it is really designed to change how people and goods are moving around. So there's a couple of cool technologies along this line as well. [01:08:35] That it's not, aren't just these little small things. You might've seen. Robots delivery robots. The Domino's for instance, has been working on there's another real cool one out there called a bird. And this is an autonomous driving power. Basically. It's a kind of a four wheel ATV and it's designed to move between the rows of fruit orchards in California or other places. [01:09:01] So what you do to train this borough robot is you press a follow button on it. You start walking around the field or wherever you want it to go. It's using, uh, some basic technology to follow you, cameras and computer vision, and it's recording it with GPS and it memorizes the route at that point. Now it can ferry all of your goods. [01:09:29] Around that path and communicate the path by the way to other burrow robots. So if you're out doing harvesting or whether it's apples out in the east coast, or maybe as I said out in California, you've got it. Helping you with some of the fruit orchards. It's amazing. So this is going to be something that is going to save a lot of time and money, these things, by the way, way up to 500 pounds and it can carry as much as a half a ton. [01:09:58] You might've seen some of the devices also from a company down in Boston, and I have thought that they were kind of creepy when, when you look at it, but the company's called Boston dynamics and. They were just bought, I think it was Hondai the bought them trying to remember. And, uh, anyway, These are kind of, they have robots that kind of look like a dog and they have other robots that kind of look like a human and they can do a lot of different chores. [01:10:33] The military has used them as have others to haul stuff. This one, this is like the little dog, it has four legs. So unlike a lot of these other robots that are on wheels, this thing can go over very, very. Terrain it can self write, et cetera. And they're also using them for things like loading trucks and moving things around, um, kind of think of Ripley again, another science fiction tie, uh, where she's loading the cargo in the bay of that spaceship. [01:11:05] And she is inside a machine. That's actually doing all of that heavy lifting now. Today, the technology, we have a can do all of that for us. So it is cool. Uh, I get kind of concerned when I see some of these things. Military robots are my favorite, especially when we're talking about artificial intelligence, but expect the first thing for these to be doing is to be almost like a companion, helping us carry things around, go fetch things for us and in the business space. [01:11:40] Go ahead and load up those trucks and haul that heavy stuff. So people aren't hurting their backs. Pretty darn cool. Hey, I want to remind you if you would like to get some of the free training or you want some help with something the best place to start is Craig peterson.com. And if you want professional help, well, not the shrink type, but with cyber security. [01:12:06] email me M E at Craig peterson.com. [01:12:10] Just in time for the holidays, we have another scam out there and this one is really rather clever and is fooling a lot of people and is costing them, frankly, a whole lot of money. [01:12:26] This is a very big cyber problem because it has been very effective. And although there have been efforts in place to try and stop it, they've still been able to kind of get ahead of it. There's a great article on vice that's in this week's newsletter. In my show notes up on the website and it is talking about a call that came in to one of the writers, Lorenzo, B cherry, um, probably completely messy and that name up, but the call came in from. [01:13:03] Supposedly right. Paid pals, uh, fraud prevention system. Someone apparently had tried to use his PayPal account to spend $58 and 82 cents. According to the automated voice on the line, PayPal needed to verify my identity to block the transfer. And here's a quote from the call, uh, in order to secure your account, please enter the code we have sent to your mobile device. [01:13:32] Now the voice said PayPal, sometimes texts, users, a code in order to protect their account. You know, I've said many times don't use SMS, right? Text messages for multi-factor authentication. There are much better ways to do it. Uh, after entering a string of six digits, the voice said, thank you. Your account has been secured and this request has been blocked. [01:13:57] Quote, again, don't worry. If any payment has been charged your account, we will refund it within 24 to 48 hours. Your reference ID is 1 5 4 9 9 2 6. You may now hang up, but this call was actually. Hacker they're using a type of bot is what they're called. These are these automated robotic response systems that just dramatically streamlined the process for the hackers to gain access into your account. [01:14:31] Particularly when you have multi-factor authentication codes where you're using. An SMS messages, but it also works for other types of one-time passwords. For instance, I suggest to everybody and we use these with our clients that they should use something called one password.com. That's really you'll find them online. [01:14:54] And one password.com allows you to use and create one time password, same thing with Google authenticator, same thing with Microsoft authenticator, they all have one-time password. So if a bad guy has found your email address and has found your password online in one of these hacks, how can they possibly get into your PayPal account or Amazon or Coinbase or apple pay or. [01:15:26] Because you've got a one time password set up or SMS, right? Multifactor authentication of some sort. Well they're full and people and absolute victims. Here's what's happening. Th this bot by the way, is great for bad guys that don't have social engineering skills, social engineering skills, or when someone calls up and says, hi, I'm from it. [01:15:51] And there's a problem. And we're going to be doing an upgrade on your Microsoft word account this weekend because of a bug or a security vulnerability. So what, what I need from you is I need to know what username you're normally using so that I can upgrade the right. So we don't, it doesn't cost us a whole bunch by upgrading accounts that aren't being used. [01:16:15] So once the account name that you use on the computer and what's the password, so we can get in and test it afterwards, that's a social engineering type attack. That's where someone calls on the phone, those tend to be pretty effective. But how about if you don't speak English very well? At all frankly, or if you're not good at tricking people by talking to them, well, this one is really great. [01:16:44] Cause these bots only cost a few hundred bucks and anybody can get started using these bots to get around multi-factor authentication. See, here's how it works. In order to break into someone's account, they need your username, email address and password. Right? Well, I already said. Much many of those have been stolen. [01:17:07] And in our boot camp coming up in a few weeks, we're going to go through how you can find out if your username has been stolen and has been posted on the dark web and same thing for your password. Right? So that's going to be part of the. Coming up that I'll announce in the newsletter. Once we finished getting everything already for you guys, they also go ahead and buy what are called bank logs, which are login details from spammers who have already tricked you into giving away some of this information. [01:17:41] But what if you have multi-factor authentication enabled something I'm always talking about, always telling you to do. Well, these bots work with platforms like Twilio, for instance, uh, and they are using other things as well, like slack, et cetera. And all the bad guy has to do with that point is going. [01:18:07] And, uh, say, they're trying to break into your account right now. So they're going to, let's get really, really specific TD bank. That's where my daughter works. So let's say you have a TD bank account. And the hacker has a good idea that you have a TD bank account knows it because they entered in your username and password and TD bank was letting them in. [01:18:32] But TD bank sent you a text message with that six character code, right? It's usually digits. It's usually a number. So what happens then? So the bad guys says, okay, so it's asking me for this six digit SMS
It's episode 50 of the Flip Side! Can't believe we've made it this far! In tonight's special episode, we look back on our early days and react to our first three episodes! We also talk about some personal friendly conversations and brutally honest revelations, the fear of dying, and Ralph Lauren's collaboration with Zepeto. We also look back on some creepy MapleStory encounters and stranger hookups in Habbo. Lastly, we discuss the CryptoPunks price hike and our future NFT predictions. These and more are in tonight's episode of the Flip Side, “Episode 50 Before/After Reacts & MapleStory Habbo Hookups”. 00:00 Intro 01:10 How It Started & How It's Going 02:30 Episode 50 Milestone 04:10 Our Podcast Editor 05:05 First Time Podcast Jitters 06:40 Reacting To Our First Three Episodes 13:10 Timeless Universal Concepts 15:00 2020 BTC Value 17:15 The Evolution of Justin Bieber 18:05 What We've Learned So Far 19:15 Bottling Things Up 21:10 Communication Is Key 24:35 Testing The Hypothesis 27:00 Finding Oneself 28:35 In My Defence 31:15 The Ice Breaker 31:45 The Fear Of Dying 36:45 The Friendship Bubbles 39:15 Ralph Lauren X Zepeto 41:00 The Story Within MapleStory 43:15 Encounters With Online Predators 47:00 HABBO Hotel 47:30 The Future of NFTs 50:20 The Price of CryptoPunks 51:50 Outro
Hoje nós vamos falar dos queridos joguinhos de navegador (ou jogos de browser). Citamos até Habbo e Neopets, vai perder essa? Dá um play ai e curte essa pérola do passado! Nesse episódios tivemos a presença da Elizabeth, jogou muitos joguinhos de navegador e contou várias histórias legais pra gente :) VAI LA COMENTAR NO NOSSO SITE PELO AMOR DE DEUS!!!! kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk Nossos links ⬇️ • Nosso Linklist • Nosso Instagram • Nosso Facebook • Nosso Twitter • Nosso Site
Like the Radio Show? Click the [Repost] ↻ button so more people can hear it! Follow @simon_foley @habbofoxx Follow us on Soundcloud: @data-transmission Follow us on Soundcloud: @datatransmission Follow our House Music Spotify Playlist: goo.gl/dHX1Cr Want more house music, tech house, deep tech, minimal? Subscribe to our Youtube Channel - bit.ly/dtytube Listen to DT Radio: Website: bit.ly/DTSite1 Pop Up: bit.ly/DTRadioPopUp1 Follow Data Transmission: Instagram: goo.gl/6LqfCJ Spotify: goo.gl/p1gaWy YouTube: goo.gl/3JmFbF Facebook: goo.gl/ZAsYwY Twitter: goo.gl/o1ZF3P iTunes Podcast: goo.gl/TK1Xxu Spotify Podcast: spoti.fi/31KIS6s Mixcloud Podcast: bit.ly/30CzOk0
It's bonus episode time of Net Flicks The Subbuteo Show Episode 10.5. Instead of talking Subbuteo we're talking… Cassette tapes Now thats what I call music WWE Theme music Habbo hotel Callum's new job Stews had kick off on tiktok Golden goal and silver goal This is the Football podcast you didn't know you needed. Find the original episode here >> https://youtu.be/uHH9WtBr_HI Send Videos too thesubbuteoshow@gmail.com Or Subbuteo.netflicks@gmail.com Find a visual version over on Youtube @ https://www.youtube.com/c/NetFlicksTheSubbuteoShow Find a Podcast version on all good Podcast services https://anchor.fm/the-subbuteo-show Make sure to subscribe to the channel so you don't miss future episode and also check out the creators channels too Subbuteo Collector - https://www.youtube.com/subbuteocollector https://twitter.com/SubbuteoCollect Westwood Table Soccer - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_4VL0PcerK8gpyoOw6VkDg https://twitter.com/Westwood_TS Watsies Subbuteo Art - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCs3_Kg0hyLXcBwixzfdkS1g https://twitter.com/watsthebull Subbuteo Online - https://subbuteo.online https://twitter.com/SubbuteoOnline #Subbuteo #Podcast #Football #Soccer #Toys
Razita llegamos a los primeros 25 episodios de este podcast, esperemos les hayan sido de su agrado y vamos por mas, nuestra proxima meta son los 50. En este episodio hablamos de lo dificil que la tiene Meghan Markle por su pasado y raza frente a toda la familia real de Inglaterra, hablamos de la depresion en muchos artistas y de los videojuegos que mas nos marcaron como Farmville, Habbo o Pet Society Sigannos en Instagram como @Pisteando_y_platicando y suscribanse en Youtube, nos vemos la proxima semana. Abrazo y cheeeeeers!!
Deze week hebben we een aanzienlijke lading games om over te praten. Daarnaast natuurlijk de demo van Resident Evil VIII, en vragen we ons af wat er toch allemaal binnen Blizzard gaande is. En om het af te sluiten staan we ook nog even stil bij RuneScape en Habbo. Mooi toch?Games die we gespeeld hebben:Cyberpunk 2077Half-Life AlyxStar Wars Jedi: Fallen OrderSkyrimDonut CountyImmortals Fenyx RisingDestiny 2Resident Evil VIII demoVragen, suggesties of andere opmerkingen kun je makkelijk en snel achterlaten in dit formuliertje of via de mail: info@gamelovepodcast.nl. Wil je niets missen? Bekijk dan onze website, gamelovepodcast.nl, en volg ons op Twitter en Instagram: @gamelovepodcast.
En el programa de hoy Josep Castellano realiza un milagro y resucita el teclado de Marc. Damos nuestras primeras impresiones sobre Assasin's Creed Valhalla y Yakuza Like a Dragron. Josep nos lleva a una profunda discusión sobre Habbo.
Sim! Hoje esses três péssimos jogadores vão comentar sobre os mais preciosos jogos de suas vidas! Vem conversar com a gente sobre PB, Bully, Guitar Hero e o nosso querido Habbo! O que? Achou que íamos falar do último Playstation e dos jogos de última geração? rs rsContato: noz3podcast@gmail.com
Se c'è una cosa che sappiamo fare è sedurre gli ascoltatori. Facciamo ricerche dopo gli episodi e non prima, se no è facile, e una volta cercavamo lo skate come i pornetti soft. Roberto va full Roberto e trova un sacco di news sui videogames, Antonio parla del suo hobby e cerca di contrabbandare libri pesanti nella discussione, senza riuscirci. Lasciate commenti e insultateci su Spreaker o su uno dei nostri social!Twitter: @obnhpodcast Instagram: @obnh_podcast Habbo esiste davvero! https://www.habbo.it/playing-habbo/what-is-habbo Tributo di Doom a Super Mario Bros: https://youtu.be/0F1vi6kjrKw Star wars squadrons: https://youtu.be/nCcfJ9uEwvs Crash bandicoot 4: https://youtu.be/aOGwx3Ju6QQArtful escape https://youtu.be/fH_Faw2zA_M Spinch: https://youtu.be/kMnNJMRmrXk Skate story: https://youtu.be/klAN1RSnTtg Haunted Garage: https://youtu.be/O2jHqXpXjKM The night is grey: https://youtu.be/lEkTxQ-7m0c Overlook Trail: https://youtu.be/3z0AQozIaNU Tenet: https://youtu.be/L3pk_TBkihU Teaser della Fondazione: https://youtu.be/xgbPSA94Rqg Fallimento del rally di Trump: https://www.ilpost.it/2020/06/21/comizio-trump-tulsa-disastro/ Walk of Shame di Trump: https://twitter.com/MarcACaputo/status/1274744250664615936 Middleditch and Schwartz (ma una cosa più difficile da scrivere potevamo trovarla?): https://www.netflix.com/title/81122572
Vi ønsker å gi tilbake til samfunnet ved å gå inn på norske nettforum og svare på spørsmålene folk der ute på lurer på, selv om de ikke spør oss og vi egentlig ikke vet svaret. I denne episoden snakker vi om sommertegn og planlegger jobbfest på Habbo. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Non facciamo podcast ma solide realtà: cerchiamo di spacciare lo sparatutto più violento della storia come se fosse gli scacchi, ascoltiamo un disco hip hop facendo finta che sia jazz e parliamo come se sapessimo quello che stiamo dicendo.Via col Vento rimosso: https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-52990714 Dave Chapelle è uno dei più grandi standup comedian (Roberto dice che è solo un'opinione, ma lui non ha mai ragione e poi non scrive le note): https://youtu.be/3tR6mKcBbT4 "To pimp a butterfly" di Kendrick Lamar: https://youtu.be/l9fN-8NjrvI https://www.iltascabile.com/linguaggi/kendrick-lamar-jazz-protesta/ Tarallini di Roberto: https://images.app.goo.gl/3fS47iz8C1HRYtkP6 Bfg Division: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QHRuTYtSbJQ Gli scacchi e Doom: https://youtu.be/I9ZsFT_eqXY Ammazza che mazza: https://aaron-demeter.itch.io/lee-carvallos-putting-challenge https://youtu.be/46yoPTuJUJA Space Force: https://youtu.be/l4mY2asIjWk Upload: https://youtu.be/0ZfZj2bn_xgSteve Carrell in “Una settimana da Dio”: https://youtu.be/i4cCEEUpcpM
Hablamos sobre el aburrimiento pasado los dos meses (aprox.) de pandemia, los videojuegos y la influencia que tienen en la gente, los mercados paralelos que generaron y como se asemejan a la vida real, Argentum Online, Habbo Hotel, Magic: The Gathering, canales de YouTube con viajes y experiencias de vida, y cultura de internet. Seguinos en Twitter: Círculo Vicioso @circulovicioso8 Pablo Wasserman: @pablowasserman Juan Ruocco: @realjuanruocco --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/circulovicioso/support
En esta especial entrega la muchachada recibe desde @balbaroquepodcast a nuestro brodel CJ Morillo y contamos nuestras aventuras online entre Habbo, LoL y Final Fantasy, qué hacemos en con nuestras parejas pa no calentarnos con tanto jugar, y muchas otras vacaneries. Se ta' jugando.
Using the ooooold Habbo platform, SWÄG organized Saturday night collective fun like no other. Four fully packed club floors (and sauna:D), hours of awesome music. Here's my contribution for the night, one hour of own works and collaborations, most still unreleased. 1. Orion - ID 2. Orion - Lander [Absence of Facts] 3. ID - ID 4. ID - ID 5. Orion - Jack It [Absence of Facts] 6. ID - ID 7. Vinicius Honorio & Orion - Sao Paolo [Planet Rhythm] 8. Orion - Droids Talking 9. Orion - Upper Hand [Elektrax] 10. Orion - Gritt Score [Darknet] 11. Orion - Lightweight Love 12. Orion - Trench 13. Orion - Katanazu 14. Orion - Strike & Counter 15. Cari Lekebusch & Orion - Borderlands [Absence of Facts] 16. Orion - Stoic [Elektrax] 17. Orion - Bowl Of Trouble [Elektrax] 18. Orion - Minas 19. Orion - Incus [Absence of Facts] 20. Orion - Merio
La pandemia, la crisis del capitalismo y la ineptitud de Mañalich. Los carretes por Habbo, las tocatas por Minecraft y lxs nuevxs usuarixs de Tik Tok. El arte en tiempos de cuarentena, la importancia de saber estar con unx mismx y el valor del ocio. La interconexión humana, la falta de empatía de los cuicos y el efecto mariposa. Teníamos harto de qué hablar y nos desahogamos por teléfono en este capítulo especial.
MARVIN SYKES PRESENTS SYKED – SYKED 056
I den aller første episoden av Gammal Morro snakker vi om noe som er nært og kjært, nemlig sosiale medier på 2000-tallet. Morsomme, kleine og rare historier fra vår tid på Habbo, Nettby, MSN (og mer) fyller sendingen, og vi teller antall dicks når vi tester ut Chatroulette LIVE.
Clique e confira nossa playlist de TBT. Bandas coloridas, banheira do Gugu, desenhos da TV Cultura, Habbo, Orkut, emos, finada MTV, doces e roupas peculiares...Ai, Gabi, só quem viveu os anos 2000 sabe. Nesse episódio, a gente faz um TBT fora de época pra relembrar o que tinha de melhor e pior — principalmente o pior — na cultura pop durante nossas infâncias e pré-adolescências. Cata a camiseta do Bob Esponja e vem com a gente!
Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us for the innovations of the future! Todays episode is on former Social Networking pioneer, Friendster. Today when you go to friendster.com you get a page that the social network is taking a break. The post was put up in 2018. How long did Rip Van Winkle Sleep? But what led to the rise of the first big social network and well, what happened? The story begins in 1973. Talkomatic was a chat room and was a hit in the PLATO or Programmed Logic for Automatic Teaching Operations community at the University of Illinois, an educational learning system that had been running since 1960. Dave Woolley and Douglas Brows at the University of Illinois brought chat and then the staff built TERM-Talk the same year, adding screen sharing and PLATO Notes would be added where you could add notes to your profile. This was the inspiration for the name of Lotus Notes. Then in the 80s came Bulletin Board Systems, 84 brought FidoNet, 88 brought IRC, 96 brought ICQ, and in 96 we got Bolt.com, the first social networking and video website with SixDegrees coming in 1997 as the first real social media website. AOL Instant Messenger showed up the same year and AOL bought ICQ in 99. It was pretty sweet that I didn't have to remember all those ICQ numbers any more! 1999 - Yahoo! And Microsoft got in the game launching tools called Messenger at about the same time and LiveJournal came along, as well as Habbo, a social networking site for games. By 2001 Six Degrees shut down and Messenger was shipped with XP. But 2002. That was the year the Euro hit the street. Before England dissed it. That was the year Israeli and Palestinian conflicts escalated. Actually, that's a lot of years, regrettably. I remember scandals at Enron and Worldcom well that year, ultimate resulting in Sarbanes Oxley to counter the more than 5 trillion dollars in corporate scandals that sent the economy into a tailspin. My Georgia Bulldogs football team beat Arkansas to win the SEC title and then beat Florida State in the Sugar Bowl. Nelly released Hot In Here and Eminem released Lose Yourself and Without Me. If film, Harry Potter was searching for the Chamber of Secrets and Frodo was on a great trek to the Two Towers. Eminem was in the theaters as well with 8 Mile. And Friendster was launched by Jonathan Abrams in Mountain View California. They wanted to get people making new friends and meeting in person. It was an immediate hit and people flocked to the site. They grew to three million users in just a few months, catching the attention of investors. As a young consultant, I loved keeping track of my friends who I never got to see in person using Friendster. Napster was popular at the time and the name Friendster came from a mashup of friends and Napster. With this early success, Friendster took $12 million dollars in funding from VC firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Benchmark Capital the next year. That was the year a Harvard student named Mark Zuckerburg launched FaceMash with his roommate Eduardo Saverin for Harvard students in a kinda' “Hot or Not” game. They would later buy Instagram as a form of euphoric recall, looking back on those days. Google has long wanted a social media footprint and tried to buy Friendster in 2003, but when rejected launched Orkut in 2004 - which just ran in Brazil, tried Google Friend Connect in 2008, which lasted until 2012, Google Buzz, which launched in 2010 and only lasted a year, Google Wave, which launched in 2009 and also only lasted a year, and of course, Google + which ran from 2011 to 2019. Google is back at it again with a new social network called Shoelace out of their Area 120 incubator. The $30 million dollars in Google stock would be worth a billion dollars today. MySpace was also launched in 2003 by Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson, growing to have more traffic than Google over time. But Facebook launched in 2004 and after having problems keeping the servers up and running, Friendster's board replaced Abrams as CEO and moved him to chairmen of the board. He was replaced by Scott Sassa. And then in 2005 Sassa was replaced by Taek Kwn and then he was replaced by Kent Lindstrom who was replaced by Richard Kimber. Such rapid churn in the top spot means problems. A rudderless ship. In 2006 they added widgets to keep up with MySpace. They didn't. They also opened up a developer program and opened up APIs. They still had 52 million unique visitors worldwide in June 2008. But by then, MySpace had grown to 7 times their size. MOL Global, an online payments processor from Malaysia bought the company in 2009 and relaunched the site. All user data was erased and Friendster provided an export tool to move data to other popular sites at the time, such as Flickr. In 2009 Friendster had 3 Million unique visitors per day. They relaunched But that dropped to less than a quarter million by the end of 2010. People abandoned the network. What happened? Facebook eclipsed the Friendster traffic in 2009. Friendster became something more used in Asia than the US. Really, though, I remember early technical problems. I remember not being able to log in, so moving over to MySpace. I remember slow loading times. And I remember more and more people spending time on MySpace, customizing their MySpace page. Facebook did something different. Sure, you couldn't customize the page, but the simple layout loaded fast and was always online. This reminds me of the scene in the show Silicon Valley, when they have to grab the fire extinguisher because they set the house on fire from having too much traffic! In 2010, Facebook acquired Friendster's portfolio of social networking patents for $40 million dollars. In 2011, Newscorp sold MySpace for $35 million dollars after it had been valued at it peak in 2008. After continuing its decline, Friendster was sold to a social gaming site in 2015, trying to capitalize on the success that Facebook had doing online gaming. But after an immediate burst of users, it too was not successful. In 2018 the site finally closed its doors. Today Friendster is the 651,465th ranked site in the world. There are a few thing to think about when you look at the Friendster story: 1. The Internet would not be what it is today without sites like Friendster to help people want to be on it. 2. The first company on a new thing isn't always the one that really breaks through 3. You have to, and I mean, have to keep your servers up. This is a critical aspect of maintaining you're momentum. I was involved with one of the first 5 facebook apps. And we had no idea 2 million people would use that app in the weekend it was launched. We moved mountains to get more servers and clusters brought online and refactored sql queries on the fly, working over 70 hours in a weekend. And within a week we hit 10 million users. That app paid for dozens of other projects and was online for years. 4. When investors move in, the founder usually gets fired at the first sign of trouble. Many organizations simply can't find their equilibrium after that and flounder. 5. Last but not least: Don't refactor every year, but if you can't keep your servers up, you might just have too much technical debt. I'm sure everyone involved with Friendster wishes they could go back and do many things differently. But hindsight is always 20/20. They played their part in the advent of the Internet. Without early pioneers like Friendster we wouldn't be where we are at today. As Heinlein said, “yet another crew of Rip Van Winkle's” But Buck Rogers eventually did actually wake back up, and maybe Friendster will as well. Thank you for tuning into another episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We're lucky to have you. Have a great day!
MARVIN SYKES PRESENTS SYKED – SYKED 025
033 | Etenkin 2000-luvun puolessa välissä nuoria villinnyt virtuaalihotelli Habbo mahdollisti omien huoneiden sisustamisen, monipuolisten minipelien pelaamisen sekä uusien ystävien saamisen, mutta myös kaikenlaisen hämäräbisneksen, kuten tuolarihuijaukset, ovipeeloilun sekä virtuaaliseksin(?). Habbosta sekä parhaista Black Mirror -jaksoista on mukana kokemuksiaan jakamassa myös Janita! Tervetuloa Triplahyppy-podcastin pariin! Habbo – 1:52 Black Mirror – 47:37 Kysymyksiä, kommentteja tai aihe-ehdotuksia? Instagram: tuplahyppy Twitter: tuplahyppy Email: tuplahyppy@gmail.com Uusi jakso joka tiistai!
PRØV WORLDS SJØLV: https://goo.gl/13wQgsHar du spelt "Habbo Hotell"? I vekas episode utforskar me den daude digitale online-verda i "Worlds 3D", ein slags gammal 3D-variant av Habbo. Spelet fryste tilsynelatande i tid i 2001, men framleis den dag i dag er det nokre få, ivrige riddarar som lever i denne forbausande skremmande, surrelle og ikkje minst syrete verda. (beklagar klikkete tastatur)Internekspertar: Mikael Andreas Sandøy/Anders Løkeland SlåkeProduksjon: Anders Løkeland Slåke
Back in the Bible days, people would rely on old people to run their lives and sit on a big chair. Sometimes they would do something important, but most of the time they'd just faff about and make a big mess. Welcome to Kings. Sean and Eliot Habbo all over your Habbo to Habbo a Habbo and flip it upside-down. Plus Sean's finances are being Habbo'd and Eliot met Habbo which led to a big Habbo breakdown. Twitter: @biblepod Email: readthebiblepod@gmail.com
Tänään muistellaan muutamia etenkin ysärilapsille tuttuja nostalgisia asioita, kuten suosittuja internetin yhteisöjä (Habbo, IRC-Galleria, Aapeli), pelejä, leluja ja tv-ohjelmia. Unohtamatta näiden vaikutusta meidän kehitykseen ihmisinä. Tämä podcast on toteutettu kaupallisessa yhteistyössä Live Nationin kanssa! Minun ja Empun nuoruutta muovasi todella isosti WWE:n SmackDown ja RAW! -ohjelmat, nyt on ilon ja onnen päivät kun WWE LIVE rantautuu Helsingin jäähalliin 10.5.2019!! Tsekkaa tapahtuman tiedot Live Nationin sivuilta: http://bit.ly/2rdjRQc - olemme Empun kanssa molemmat paikalla ja tule ihmeessä nykäisemään hihasta jos bongaat meidät! Kilpailu: Voita itsellesi ja kaverillesi liput podcastissa käsiteltävään tapahtumaan. Kilpailukuva löytyy eeddspeaks nimimerkin takaa Instagramissa. Vieras: Emppu Koivula (Emppulsive)
Tretas no zap, dicas de suicídi0, Habbo, crianças online e eu não vou escrever mais nada não pra não ser processado. Isso & muito mais nesse episódio do Plantão Inútil com Bigos, Raul, & Evandrinho Sataneiro. Picpay: picpay.me/plantaoinutil Fodastore: instagram.com/fodastore Discord: https://discord.gg/AHEysru Twitter: twitter.com/plantaoinutil Instagram: instagram.com/plantaoinutil iTunes (avalie): goo.gl/PSZEyp Música do final: Ananda, Joker Beats - Quero Que Tu Vá
Muistatko, kun tuttavasi profiili nousi IRC-Gallerian päivän kuvaksi? Halme & Saarinen käyvät läpi Digisen iltapäivän nostalgiajaksossa digimaailman entisiä menestystarinoita. Tällä kertaa yritetään ymmärtää tulevaisuutta katsomalla menneisyyteen. Miksi galtsusta ei tullut Facebookin kilpailijaa? Jakaako kukaan enää musiikkifiiliksiään MySpacessa? Tekeekö Habbo Hotellin sälällä vielä jotain? Miten Facebook otti tästä kaikesta opikseen? Lisäajatuksia digipalveluiden nousuista ja kaatumisista kertoo IRC-Galleriassa työskennellyt Heini Björk. Hän paljastaa myös, mikä 2000-luvun alun internetissä oli niin kultaista. Lopuksi Halme esittelee jälleen kaksi digimaailman jännittävää tuotteita ja kysyy Saariselta, ovatko ne kivoja vai kauheita. Keskustelu ohjelmasta jatkuu Twitterissä aihetunnisteella #digineniltapäivä
Witnessing Unbound: Holocaust Representation and the Origins of Memory (Wayne State University Press, 2017) is a collection of essays and interviews that offer fresh insight on the last of the primary witnesses to the Holocaust. The book interrogates the stylization of the narrative account of the primary witness, and it offers significant new scholarship on the Halakhic witness — Orthodox Jewish prisoners of German concentration camps, who attempted to confront their experience through the framework of Halakhic thought and praxis. The book also provides analysis of the different methods and aims of collecting witness testimony between the Soviet-dominated East and the Allies of the West. Through the testimony of survivors of and witnesses to the atrocities, and the work of those who seek them out, the book unveils new insights at a critical moment in the documentation and commemoration of the Holocaust. David Gottlieb interviews co-author and co-editor Henri Lustiger-Thaler, professor of cultural sociology at Ramapo College of New Jersey. David Gottlieb is a PhD Candidate in the History of Judaism at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His research focuses on interpretations of the Binding of Isaac and the formation of Jewish cultural memory. He can be reached at davidg1@uchicago.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Witnessing Unbound: Holocaust Representation and the Origins of Memory (Wayne State University Press, 2017) is a collection of essays and interviews that offer fresh insight on the last of the primary witnesses to the Holocaust. The book interrogates the stylization of the narrative account of the primary witness, and it offers significant new scholarship on the Halakhic witness — Orthodox Jewish prisoners of German concentration camps, who attempted to confront their experience through the framework of Halakhic thought and praxis. The book also provides analysis of the different methods and aims of collecting witness testimony between the Soviet-dominated East and the Allies of the West. Through the testimony of survivors of and witnesses to the atrocities, and the work of those who seek them out, the book unveils new insights at a critical moment in the documentation and commemoration of the Holocaust. David Gottlieb interviews co-author and co-editor Henri Lustiger-Thaler, professor of cultural sociology at Ramapo College of New Jersey. David Gottlieb is a PhD Candidate in the History of Judaism at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His research focuses on interpretations of the Binding of Isaac and the formation of Jewish cultural memory. He can be reached at davidg1@uchicago.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Witnessing Unbound: Holocaust Representation and the Origins of Memory (Wayne State University Press, 2017) is a collection of essays and interviews that offer fresh insight on the last of the primary witnesses to the Holocaust. The book interrogates the stylization of the narrative account of the primary witness, and it offers significant new scholarship on the Halakhic witness — Orthodox Jewish prisoners of German concentration camps, who attempted to confront their experience through the framework of Halakhic thought and praxis. The book also provides analysis of the different methods and aims of collecting witness testimony between the Soviet-dominated East and the Allies of the West. Through the testimony of survivors of and witnesses to the atrocities, and the work of those who seek them out, the book unveils new insights at a critical moment in the documentation and commemoration of the Holocaust. David Gottlieb interviews co-author and co-editor Henri Lustiger-Thaler, professor of cultural sociology at Ramapo College of New Jersey. David Gottlieb is a PhD Candidate in the History of Judaism at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His research focuses on interpretations of the Binding of Isaac and the formation of Jewish cultural memory. He can be reached at davidg1@uchicago.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Witnessing Unbound: Holocaust Representation and the Origins of Memory (Wayne State University Press, 2017) is a collection of essays and interviews that offer fresh insight on the last of the primary witnesses to the Holocaust. The book interrogates the stylization of the narrative account of the primary witness, and it offers significant new scholarship on the Halakhic witness — Orthodox Jewish prisoners of German concentration camps, who attempted to confront their experience through the framework of Halakhic thought and praxis. The book also provides analysis of the different methods and aims of collecting witness testimony between the Soviet-dominated East and the Allies of the West. Through the testimony of survivors of and witnesses to the atrocities, and the work of those who seek them out, the book unveils new insights at a critical moment in the documentation and commemoration of the Holocaust. David Gottlieb interviews co-author and co-editor Henri Lustiger-Thaler, professor of cultural sociology at Ramapo College of New Jersey. David Gottlieb is a PhD Candidate in the History of Judaism at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His research focuses on interpretations of the Binding of Isaac and the formation of Jewish cultural memory. He can be reached at davidg1@uchicago.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Witnessing Unbound: Holocaust Representation and the Origins of Memory (Wayne State University Press, 2017) is a collection of essays and interviews that offer fresh insight on the last of the primary witnesses to the Holocaust. The book interrogates the stylization of the narrative account of the primary witness, and it offers significant new scholarship on the Halakhic witness — Orthodox Jewish prisoners of German concentration camps, who attempted to confront their experience through the framework of Halakhic thought and praxis. The book also provides analysis of the different methods and aims of collecting witness testimony between the Soviet-dominated East and the Allies of the West. Through the testimony of survivors of and witnesses to the atrocities, and the work of those who seek them out, the book unveils new insights at a critical moment in the documentation and commemoration of the Holocaust. David Gottlieb interviews co-author and co-editor Henri Lustiger-Thaler, professor of cultural sociology at Ramapo College of New Jersey. David Gottlieb is a PhD Candidate in the History of Judaism at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His research focuses on interpretations of the Binding of Isaac and the formation of Jewish cultural memory. He can be reached at davidg1@uchicago.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Estuvimos en vivo, tratando los siguientes puntos importantes: Cómo Habbo hotel puede destruir tu relación. ¿De nuevo la historia del "Harry Potter"? Por supuesto, esa historia nunca cansa.
Igår eller jag menar ju förstås idag ha ha ha pratar vi om Habbo6, eller Habbo-sex. Ni vet, när man knullar med Habbo-figurer. I Habbo-rum. På Habbo-hotell. På Habbo-halvön. Barnen röker spliff hela dagarna. Så jävla höga. Det är så äckligt. 10-åringar som sexar varandra. Obehagligt fan. Så jävla läskigt. Man blir ju mörkrädd va. Aja, jag åt glass tidigare idag. Jordgubb. Den var så där. Nästan som Habbo6. Sött men uttjatat. Pröva analt istället.
Gronkh im Spiegel; 8Bit; Vote Obama; Gerrits Fotos; DigitalCraft; Downgrade Minecraft; Bildstrecke Google; Google Übersetzer; App.NET; Clark und Gerrit auf App.NET; Audioboo; Habbo.
Adam et Eve en tchat sur Habbo.fr
Revivez la dernière émission de habbonet ! Une émission incroyable et riche en émotion avec les adieux de l'équipe ! Etait présents entre autres ; Maxbargo, kev6900-5, hykayama, jeanna-x3, damos1, nloveur, !Omega, ..cuisinier.., & d'autres ! ... A très bientôt !
Les animateurs de habbonet entourés de Maxbargo ont décidés, à leur façon, de se mobiliser pour la radio Skyrock ! Invités ; Jeanna-x3, damos1, x-kevin92-x, hugues54 & Xelir
Invités ce dimanche : jeanna-x3 & damos1 ! Au programme : jeux, délires et passages antennes :p
Avec la participation exceptionnelle de lucien-lecoquin : une émission inédite à réécouter d'urgence :p
Retrouvez !Omega et Jeanna-x3 pour le Meeting de Norman qui a eu lieu dans l'après-midi du 30/03/2011!
Partie 2/2: retrouvez Quentiin67210, kev-radar-new, Jeanna-x3, C@ste68 ainsi que tous les candidats de Dilemme pour un prime de folie!
Partie 1/2: retrouvez Quentiin67210, kev-radar-new, Jeanna-x3, C@ste68 ainsi que tous les candidats de Dilemme pour un prime de folie!
Charlou59650 en live et aux platines d'Habbonet pour 50 minutes de mix non-stop !
The News: - Project Top Secret has a winner - Blizzard tokenizes you - Habbo Empire - WTF. Don't tailgate me. - SOE Fan Faire - Silkroad slays 7+ million - Top 10 Free to Play MMOs - Guild Wars 2 FAQ The Mail: - Matt corrects me - Nathaniel pleas for FFA PvP - Gio makes me give Uwe Boll credit - Jmo hits the nail on the head - Fred gets more Mac info than he anticipated - Kassandra wonders which game is the biggest - Els hits me with a shotgun blast of topics - Alvin's harddrive suffers - Celebrity Mobhunter on the scene - Blake reminds me, UO did that too. Podcast 122's Song Selections [0:04:40] Auto Assault - Azure Torment [0:06:38] Helmet - Wilma's Rainbow [0:07:56] Meshuggah - Obzen [0:09:21] Extreme - Cupid's Dead [0:10:36] Spineshank - Forgotton [0:12:41] Slaughter - Fly to the Angels [0:18:00] Filter - The Wake [0:21:57] The Church - Louisiana [0:23:00] Burn Season - Carry On [0:29:11] Institute - Bullet Proof Skin [0:34:46] Nas - My War (unreleased) [0:38:34] Eminem - Mockingbird [0:47:32] The Exies - Ugly [0:52:08] Breaking Benjamin - Topless [0:57:10] Zero Seven - In the Waiting Line [0:59:28] Warrant - Where the Down Boys Go [1:01:46] Soul Coughing - Super Bon Bon [1:02:56] Limp Bizkit - Creamer [1:03:58] Conjure One - Make A Wish Plenty of people have asked me to do this sort of listing. I admit it is rather slick, but it's a ton of labor pulling this together which means it might not happen again. :)
Welcome to Kid Power Radio. I’m your host Max and each week I review what’s happening on TV, at the movies, books and music I like ….You get the idea In the Nickelodeon news... (Talk about when Sponge and Squidward go on strike) This week on Cartoon Network... (Talk about the Kids Next Door’s final mission) In the other t.v. shows news... (Talk about Monk and Psych) The Quote of the week is... Is 'monkey' spelled m-k-g-d-s-r-t-h-p? -Someone who doesn’t know how to spell In the video game news... (Talk about the hard PSP game Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix) In the parent-torturing news... (Talk about how my parents burn everything I eat) In the restaurant news... (Talk about Chef Rob’s) In The Movie news... (Talk about and rate the following movie: King Kong) In the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad substitute teacher news... In the fun places news... (Talk about Professor Morte’s King Kong) Funny Wacky Packy of the week... And the winner is...Buzz Lighter’s!! Instead of Woody’s!! And yes Woody’s is a real restaurant!! Listener Question... I got 1 email this week from Jeannie... Thanks everyone for sending in emails. You all are now official members of the Kid Power Radio Street Team. Your job is to tell all your friends about the show and if they email me they could get a special shout out just like you did. Remember, you can email me at RADIO STAR MAX at YAHOO.COM That’s it for now. See you next week. Bye!!
Welcome to another mini-podcast, this time with bonus Halloween chills. Today's frightful topics include:- Sony's Station Launcher's Creepy Features- Electronics Arts dresses up in spooky costumes woven out of human ... logic- Habbo Hotel scares 80 million toons- Sword of the New World wins the costume contest- Warhamma.com launches a frighteningly good podcastListen with the lights on.
Emmi Kuusikko is Director of User and Market Insight for Sulake Corporation who run the online world, Habbo hotel, discussing here their global youth survey. Agree, disagree, like, don't like...? Feel free to leave a comment at http://mediasnackers.com/2006/12/mediasnackers-podcast57/
NOTE: This was also cross posted in the otakugeneration LJ community. Shownotes :: (show 066) :: (website) :: (podcast feed) :: (direct download) :: (direct iTunes link) With WTF...recorded live on September 11th, 2006. This week we talked about the infamous Eva rumors... Matt and Ben were here, Dan was back with a Manga review, and Todd told about us some gadgets! Dan joined the 4chan 9/11 Habbo raid (during the show). Plus, we ate the rest of Trae's awesome cookies, and read feedback... So you're still wondering, what else happened? Did Ben rant? Did Matt encourage another inside joke? What the hell is Habbo? What did Todd say about this week's retro gadget/toy? and how many people guessed for the contest? and did anyone win?!?! Why is Ben Black & White in the picture? Good questions! Tune-in, download, listen and find out! Call Us! ::: Skype Voicemail ::: You can leave us voicemail using Skype, at: otakugeneration or call: (610) 628.3154 ::: K7 Voicemail ::: You can also leave us voicemail with a west coast phone number: (206) 984-2069 ::: GoogeTalk Voicemail ::: You can also leave us voicemail with GoogleTalk, at: otaku.generation@gmail.com ::: Gizmo ::: You can also leave us voicemail with using Gizmo, at: otakugeneration Mentioned Stuff and Link(s) (during the show) OGchan.net OG Forums OG Photos Eva Movie annoucement (ANN link), Aaron Clarks (the eva monkey) response Figurine with squshy... um...bre... you can figure it out! Amstrads Can't! Nobody's Watching (part 1), (part 2), (part 3) Nobody's Watching (at the emmys) Kill Bill (mario style) The OG LamePoll by Alan This is an application Alan built long ago... so we're going to put it to use... The intial poll will expire on October 2nd... so take Show# 64's LamePoll (if you haven't voted, it's still going), and this weeks new LamePoll!!! (the poll ends on the Monday of the recording, so we can mention the results on the show) If you're interested, you can see last week's poll results here. Flame of the Week by Bryce :: (hatemail@otakugeneration.net) Nothing to be "flipped this week"... we have something... but bryce hasn't read it yet... anyhow, direct any of your flames / hatred to Bryce at: hatemail@otakugeneration.net, and he'll flip it to something amusing. Don't be nasty, or rude... this might not last as a segment idea, but we thought we'd give it a try. OG "guess the character in the envelope" Contest Bryce had a great idea for a contest... We picked a new anime character for the new-run of the contest... wrote it down on a piece of paper, and sealed it up in an envelope. You the listener must figure out who the "character in the envelope" is... The prize will be a pack of goodies, a Lisa Ray CD, and maybe something more *hint*hint*cough*... So you ask what are the rules? Well they're pretty simple. First off, we will only accept one guess per email, once a week. If you put more than one guess, in an email, we will only take the first guess. You cannot enter more then once an week, and not more then once per email. Please pay attention to the use of the word "character", it could be a person, animal, car, mech, bryce, paul, a tree, a rock (assuming they are portrayed as "character" some how), almost anything. Each week will reveal a little more about the "character in the envelope" in an anime, until some one guesses it right, and wins. As usual listen to the show for more details, and email your guesses to: otaku.generation@gmail.com, and use the subject line of: OG CHARACTER IN THE ENVELOPE CONTEST This week we got over 10 people, however we're still going to insist at least 10 people give their guesses, before we give another clue. We don't mean 10 total, we mean 10 guesses within 1 weeks time. So send your guess in now! We know there's way more then 10 of you out there downloading, so email-us! It's worth unique prizes from us! Promos / Break Geek Brief TV (video podcast w/Cali Lewis) All of My Love :: by Valley Lodge :: (now on music.podshow.com) Worrying Man :: by Porter Block :: (now on music.podshow.com) Booty Voodoo :: by Lee Coulter :: (now on music.podshow.com) Nickname ME! by Alan :: (nickname@otakugeneration.net) We didn't have any nicks this week... But, keep'em coming people... But please tell us something about yourself!!! Weekly Reviews by Dan :: (reviews@otakugeneration.net) Aaron couldn't make it to the show; he had other plans, but Dan was here! Dan had a manga review... so go listen to it already! (manga) :: Zombie Hunter Gadget Reviews by Todd :: (gadgets@otakugeneration.net) InterVideo InstantOn GeexBox [Update] Logitech MX and VX Revolution Mice (link 1), (link 2) The World's Most Expensive MP3 Player Banana Phone Apple NEW iPods Ultimate LEGO Chaingun Daisy Air Rifle (retro gun of the week) If you send us feedback, and you want us to nickname you, email us, at: otaku.generation@gmail.com With somewhere in the subject: NICKNAME ME NOTE: If we've already nicknamed you, you can't be re-nicked... unless you plead... lots! ...and we mean LOTS!!! =D For Podcast promos or MP3 Feedback, email us, at: otaku.generation@gmail.com With the exact subject: MP3 PROMOTION :: (for podcast promos) MP3 FEEDBACK :: (for audio feedback) In the body of the message, put: Your Name Your Podcast Your website Brief copy about your podcast for us to read Join us next week... for more fun, dorkyness and entertainment! There will be a new show on Wednesday, and "podcast-in" with us! Trust me, you know we'll make you want listen to the "Best of Jefferson Sings!", and do something just to prove Ben wrong! Download us, give us a listen... and maybe we'll give you some waffle-cookies and special OG luvin sauce!! ...um... okay only maybe if bake us awesome cookies like Traeonna, and send us hot pictures of yourself in nothing but in an apron... It's September now!!! Which means voting time again!! [insert "Duct Tape for my Duckhole" here] We appreciate the votes , donations, and comments even if we don't read them on the show... umm.. right votes... and iTunes reviews... at any of the following places: www.PodcastAlley.com, www.PodcastPickle.com, www.PodcastDirectory.com, www.PodcastCharts.com, and/or www.DigitalPodcast.com. Oh and always check out www.podcasterworld.com! Word-of-mouth advertising is also appreaciated. Thanks for the support, and the people who have been voting for us! You roxxorz Bryce's waffle cookie cooker! ...and shhttuuuuff... o.O?