Showing posts with label fob. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fob. Show all posts
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Friday, April 15, 2011
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Monday, July 19, 2010
Monday, May 31, 2010
Molester "Monk" Lured Boys With His Wii

A 46-year-old Taiwanese man has been arrested for raping four young boys.
The perpetrator would invite young boys to his house on the pretext of playing his Nintendo Wii. Apparently, he would then sexually assault the children. One of the boys' mothers noticed that something was bothering her son, and he told what had happened to him. The mother then contacted the police, which began the investigation.
The man, who sports a shaved head, is supposedly not a real Buddhist monk, but rather, a "bogus" monk. He says that the sex was consentual.
Under Taiwanese law, it is illegal to have sex with minors under the age of 14 — regardless of consent. For each count of rape, the accused faces a seven year term prison sentence.
Kotaku
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Wait, pirates! That Cross Days download is a trap!
Apparently a trojan/virus has been released alongside copies of Cross Days flowing through the Japanese P2P networks, disguised as a fake installer. When activated, the program gathers data from the computer and pretends to take a survey of players, including asking for personal information. Once it's done, everything gets uploaded to a public website, alongside a screenshot of their desktop.
Once discovered, users can ask for their data to be deleted, but must first click a button acknowledging that they have illegally downloaded Cross Days. Better yet, the whole scheme is revealed in the fake installer's terms of service agreement, something no one reads.
It seems that public shaming is now a weapon being wielded in the war against warez, though obviously the implications for identity theft and blackmail mark this particular stunt as somewhat dangerous in its own right.
Japanator
Once discovered, users can ask for their data to be deleted, but must first click a button acknowledging that they have illegally downloaded Cross Days. Better yet, the whole scheme is revealed in the fake installer's terms of service agreement, something no one reads.
It seems that public shaming is now a weapon being wielded in the war against warez, though obviously the implications for identity theft and blackmail mark this particular stunt as somewhat dangerous in its own right.
Japanator
Monday, March 22, 2010
Counter-Strike Cheater’s Brain Stabbed in Wallhack Brawl

A gamer accused of cheating in a net café game of CounterStrike narrowly escaped death after irate players skewered his head on a knife.
The incident began in a net café in China’s northern province of Jilin, when a group of youths apparently noticed a 17-year-old boy they had been playing CounterStrike with had been cheating by using a “wallhack” to allow himself to see through walls.
An argument began and a fight broke out outside the café. During the fight the cheater had a 30cm knife thrust into his left temple, with the blade only being stopped by the other side of his skull.
Sankaku Complex
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Saturday, March 6, 2010
South Korean couple starved child while raising 'virtual baby'
A South Korean couple arrested for allowing their baby to starve to death had been raising an online child, state media reported citing police sources.
The couple, residents of a Seoul suburb, allegedly neglected their prematurely born three-month-old daughter, feeding her just once a day in between 12-hour stretches at a neighborhood internet cafe, the official Yonhap news agency reported.
Police said the couple had become obsessed with raising a virtual girl character called "Anima" in "Prius Online", a popular role-playing game in South Korea.
"The couple seemed to have lost their will to live a normal life, because they didn't have jobs and gave birth to a premature baby," said Chung Jin-won, a police officer.
"They indulged themselves in the online game of raising a virtual character so as to escape from reality, which led to the death of their real baby."
CNN
The couple, residents of a Seoul suburb, allegedly neglected their prematurely born three-month-old daughter, feeding her just once a day in between 12-hour stretches at a neighborhood internet cafe, the official Yonhap news agency reported.
Police said the couple had become obsessed with raising a virtual girl character called "Anima" in "Prius Online", a popular role-playing game in South Korea.
"The couple seemed to have lost their will to live a normal life, because they didn't have jobs and gave birth to a premature baby," said Chung Jin-won, a police officer.
"They indulged themselves in the online game of raising a virtual character so as to escape from reality, which led to the death of their real baby."
CNN
Monday, March 1, 2010
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