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...Selsby said some students did believe the ploy, though computer services was able to limit any potential damage by changing their passwords. Selsby added that since many students use the same e-mail address and password for different sites, scammers could try using that combination on popular Web sites like eBay and Paypal...
...spokeswoman for the law school. The first database contained the Social Security numbers of about 1,400 potential applicants who requested information from the law school admissions office. The second database held contact information including home addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses, as well as user-generated passwords, for an additional 1,800 people who had already submitted applications. Duke officials are uncertain whether the electronic intruder actually acquired the compromised data, but the admissions office has contacted people affected, warning them of the security breach. In one such e-mail sent Tuesday, William J. Hoye, Duke Law?...
...Francisco The decoy sign outside speakeasy-themed Bourbon & Branch advertises the ANTI-LEAGUE SALOON, the prohibitionist group founded 113 years before the bar opened. Reservations for tables (and the daily password to whisper into the tiny loudspeaker) are available to all via the bar's website bourbonandbranch.com but remain hard to come by for much of the week. To meet demand, the venue expanded into a third room for standing patrons, accessed via another secret door behind a bookshelf. Despite the excitement in the bar, no loud celebrating is permitted in the seated section, with those patrons...
...people who receive the roughly 30 e-mails sent each hour through the Risk interface by game players. Most of them are fairly technical and straightforward—“How do I change my password?”—while a few are just plain nice—“YOU ROCK! Whoever you are.” Others, however, are malicious: Some undergraduates are taking Harvard Risk far too seriously...
...comply, and students have no choice but to use my.harvard once again. Access to course Web sites is crucial for the success of CrimsonConnect.com, and one of the few reasons besides registration that students still use my.harvard. Legal experts have disputed whether Harvard has copyright claim over password-protected web sites and can even force Hadfield to remove this outstanding feature. But issues of copyright aside, the administration’s approach is wrongheaded, and clearly not in the best interests of students. My.harvard—which Harvard somehow thinks is wonderful and responding to student needs?...