Google unveils new search features to make searching easier & faster

Google, the world?¡¥s most popular web search engine, newly introduced three new search functions to make searching easier and also faster.
Voice Search started off in the mobile arena. Out there for the Chrome web browser, Voice Search allows the user to speak their queries towards the mobile devices, rather than type.
Search by Image continues to be produced offered on desktop. With Search by Image, users gain the ability to upload any picture or plug in an image URL from the web and ask the search engine to make search for it. Freshly made extensions for the Google Chrome and Firefox web browsers will also enable users to search any image around the Web merely by right-clicking.
Google also unveiled Instant Pages engineering, which has predictive nature that offers users a prediction of what they will probably click on before they have even hit a link.
Google claims that its new search method pre-renders web search results to a hugely accurate degree.
Announcing the feature, the search firm said, “The beneficial news is that we’ve been working for years to develop our relevance engineering, and we can fairly accurately predict when to pre render.”
Figures suggest that Google processes around a single billion requests every day.

UK Ministry of Defence highlights social media perils

With an intention to raise awareness of social media dangers, the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) has posted a couple of videos that depicting the perils involved in revealing too much information on social-networking sites like Facebook and Tweeter.
In a single video, a female naval officer appears making use of Twitter to share her invitation to a club. In addition, she repeatedly uses Foursquare to reveal her location. The viewers are asked whether it can just be friends and relatives who will know where naval officer checked in.
Within the second video, a mother is seen utilizing popular social network Facebook to share that her son is based in FOB Jackson in Afghanistan, and that he is very excited by a VVIP visit.
Both MOD videos finish with the message, ?¡ãThink before you tweet, blog, update, tag, comment, check-in, upload, text, and share.?¡À
However, Gen Lorimer confirmed that they had not plans to force service personnel, their families and veterans to stop working with social media.

LulzSec takes credit for hacking CIA website

LulzSec, the anonymous hacker group that recently claimed responsibility for breaching the computer system security networks of Sony, PBS and FBI associate InfraGard, videogame studio Bethesda and U. S. Senate, is now claiming that it hacked into the website with the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and forced it to go offline.
Applying micro-blogging platform Twitter, LulzSec wrote, “Tango down – cia. gov – for your lulz”.
CIA is yet to confirm the hack claim, though the CIA website was out-of-the-way at times on Wednesday. A spokesperson for CIA just stated that the agency was looking in to the report.
LulzSec not long ago announced the details of its telephone hotline asking people to suggest them extra targets. The caller to the telephone number, which appears to belong on the state of Ohio, meets having a recorded message, by someone calling himself Pierre Dubois.
LulzSec mentioned it so far used distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks target a total of eight sites suggested by callers.
Earlier, LulzSec infiltrated the computer networks of SonyPictures. com, and stole a significant amount of users’ personal information. Then, the hacker group breached the computer system security of US-based Public Broadcasting Service and posted a variety of fake stories on its website.
Soon after, the hacker group attacked FBI’s private-sector affiliate, called InfraGard, and stole emails, passwords and addresses as well as the like.