Holland Lop Bunnies
(Source: im-cool-like-that, via pooleegonzo)
Holland Lop Bunnies
(Source: im-cool-like-that, via pooleegonzo)
(via pleatedjeans)
Chocolate Dipped Peanut Butter Stuffed Bananas! (tutorial)
The Ten Internet Plagues from CollegeHumor
Maybe it isnt the Mayan Apocalypse we need to worry about… they’re dead, after all. Unless they come back as Zombie Mayans, the real threat we face this year comes from the cyber realm, as predicted by the ancient Egyptians on their iSisPads.
Artists: collegehumor / tumblr
(via i-spill-kisses-with-love)
Want this to b done on my nails… U_U
(via i-spill-kisses-with-love)
That’s life, and love. When one is surrounded by love, the feeling of excitement fades away, and one tends to ignore the true love that lies in between the peace and dullness.
Love shows up in all forms. Flowers, and romantic moments are only used and appear on the surface of the relationship. Under all this, the pillar of true love stands, and that’s our life.
Denise D’souza
Our old school building got burned down last March 28… :( Amazingly, a rainbow appeared after declaring fire out. A sign that the accident will never happen again. GV. :))
I think I made a wrong decision… and I wish I’m wrong… :(
The Adventures of Ordinary Batman by Sarah Johnson
It stands to reason that since Batman is kind of just a regular guy, the comics are kind of lax in portraying his more normal adventures. In her spare time, Sarah began doodling some of Bat’s more mundane capers, like fishing, riding a swing tire, and scooping up the poop of an adorbzable kitteh. A motion I propose to the Internets: this is all official canon now. If we all pretend hard enough, they’ll have to make it true, right?
(via Critical windows bug makes worm-meat of millions of high-value machines | Ars Technica)
Microsoft has plugged a critical hole in all supported versions of Windows that allows attackers to hit high-value computers with self-replicating attacks that install malicious code with no user interaction required.
The vulnerability in the Remote Desktop Protocol is of particular concern to system administrators in government and corporate settings because they often use the feature to remotely trouble-shoot e-mail servers, point-of-sale terminals and other machines when they experience problems. RDP is also the default way to manage Windows machines that connect to Amazon’s EC2 and other cloud services. That means potentially millions of endpoints are at risk of being hit by a powerful computer worm that spreads exponentially, similarly to the way exploits known as Nimda and Code Red did in 2001.
“This type of vulnerability is where no user intervention or user action is required and an attacker can just send some specially crafted packets or requests, and because of which he or she can take complete control of the target machine,” Amol Sarwate, director of Qualys’ vulnerability research lab, said in an interview. While RPD is not enabled by default, he said the number of machines that have it turned on is a “big concern” because it is so widely used in large organizations and business settings.
The bug affects Windows XP and all versions of Windows released since, including the developer preview of Windows 8. It was privately reported by Luigi Auriemma, an Italian security researcher who frequently focuses on vulnerabilities in industrial control systems and SCADA, or supervisory control and data acquisition, systems used to control dams, gasoline refineries, and power plants. Microsoft said there’s no indication the vulnerability is being used in the public to attack Windows users at the moment, but the company predicts that could change.
“Due to the attractiveness of this vulnerability to attackers, we anticipate that an exploit for code execution will be developed in the next 30 days,” Suha Can and Jonathan Ness, of Microsoft Security Response Center Engineering, wrote in an advisory published Tuesday.
They urged users to “promptly apply” an accompanying security update. Those who can’t update right away and are running Vista or a later version of Windows should enable Network Level Authentication, a feature that requires users logging in to RDP boxes to have security credentials before gaining access…
[a good time to make sure your pc’s are up to date, security patch-wise…]