गुरुवार, जून 16, 2011
Shahrukh is a lovely soul: Shweta Varma

The Bhindi Baazaar Inc. actor talks about her upcoming movie and her equation with her superstar brother-in-law
Bhindi Baazaar Inc. maybe her first mainstream film, but Shweta Varma is not one to nervously bite her nails while waiting for its release. “I am vacationing in Singapore with my entire family. The shooting schedule was really hectic and I didn’t get much time to unwind. This is my chance to do so. I will be back before the release,” she says.
Shweta is very confident about the movie. “In Bhindi Baazaar, we have really great actors, who take the movie to a serious level. It’s a real-life underworld thriller and I am sure that genre too has its audience. We have also integrated the lives of people who actually live in Bhindi Bazaar (an area in Mumbai). So I am confident people will like it.” Shweta plays Simran, “a typical girl-next-door who is just out of college, is jovial and fun-loving. I am like that in real life too, except I talk much less than Simran. She talks a lot,” laughs Shweta.
She has always wanted to be an actress, but when Shweta got a job as a flight attendant with an international airline five years ago, she didn’t say no. “I met new people every day, people from all over the world. You learn a lot about people, which helps when you are portraying a character. Not that I’d thought it would. During shoots and flights, there are times when you are dead tired, but you have to pretend to be fresh as a daisy. Both professions do have that in common.”
Three months ago, Shweta’s life took another turn when she wed Gauri Khan’s brother Vikrant Chibba and thereby inherited Shahrukh Khan as a brother-in-law. “He’s been very nice to me. He is a lovely soul, a lovely human being. We do talk about films, but our relationship is more personal than professional. I don’t want him to feel that he has to help. When he started out, he had no godfather in the industry. He is a self-made man and that’s why he connects better with the audience than those actors who had godfathers. I want to go that way.”
गुरुवार, जून 16, 2011 by rahul thakur · 0
LulzSec Offers To Hack Web Sites by Request


"Now accepting calls from true lulz fans -- let's all laugh together at butthurt gamers. 614-LULZSEC, accepting as many as we can, let's roll," read the tweet.
Security Is 'Drab'
Our call to that number produced only a standard outgoing voice-mail message from "Pierre Dubois." A reverse lookup of the number was unsuccessful, as it appears to be unlisted.
LulzSec first emerged last month with attacks on a wide range of targets. "We're ... a small team of lulzy individuals who feel the drabness of the cyber community is a burden on what matters: fun," the group posted in its own web site, which on Wednesday featured a long list of links to internal data

"We don't like the U.S. government very much," reads the post with the Senate data, a long list of programming code. "Their boats are weak, their lulz are low, and their sites aren't very secure. In an attempt to help them fix their issues, we've decided to donate additional lulz in the form of owning them some more! This is a small, just-for-kicks release of some internal data from Senate.gov -- is this an act of war, gentlemen? Problem?"
Despite the playful tone -- the LulzSec site greets visitors with the theme from the Love Boat TV show -- the breaches are serious business to cybersecurity experts.
Flirting with Jail
"They are definitely breaking the law," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at U.K.-based Sophos Security and author of its Naked Security blog. "In most countries around the world, it is illegal to access a computer system without authorization -- and they have clearly done that by exposing users' information and sensitive data. Furthermore, they have launched denial-of-service attacks against web sites, which has seen other hackers go to prison in the past."
Can they be traced and stopped?
"I would imagine that the authorities are looking into that," Cluley said. "However, my guess is that LulzSec is being careful to cover its tracks and hide their location. The danger for LulzSec, of course, is that they may get cocky and make a stupid mistake."
Cluley said despite the brazenness, LulzSec should quit while it's ahead. "They've gained a lot of attention from the media, and the computer-crime authorities will be very keen to identify them," he said.
Last September, Edwin Andres Pena, 27, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for hacking Internet phone networks to make unauthorized calls. And in March 2010, Albert Gonzalez, 28, who used the code name Soup Nazi, got 20 years for hacking credit accounts and stealing as much as $200 million.
But LulzSec doesn't appear to be interested in hacking for profit, only for fun, and, it claims, to expose security weaknesses.
गुरुवार, जून 16, 2011 by rahul thakur · 0
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