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3 Cost Effective Ways to Solve Metro Manila's Traffic Problem

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The Facebook page of ANC 24/7 is asking for its reader's suggestion on how to solve Metro Manila's traffic problem. This got me thinking, "what is the best way to solve Metro Manila's traffic problem?" It's easy to make suggestions, what's hard is the implementation and the cost of implementation. So what is the the best way to solve Metro Manila's traffic problem and the most cost effective solution? Punitive Fines Add caption First of all, any implementation will definitely cost money, a lot of money. The cause of the traffic mess is the people themselves so it's only right that those causing the traffic problem should be fined and the fine should hurt. That way, the fines will pay for the cost of enforcing the law. The fines should start at P500 and goes up every week if you don't pay it within 15 days. To enforce this and prevent people from ignoring the fine. It will be tied to their driver's license or car registr

Sony's PSN Was Running Without A Firewall

The big news about a massive security breach at Sony's PSN exposing the personal info of 77 million members just gets better and better.

For a background, PSN is Sony's PlayStation Network where users of the PS3 can connect to play with each other. You put in your personal info and credit card info as well to buy other titles.

There was a breach in their servers and 77 million members info was exposed to the hackers.

The problem was, not only was Sony not very forthcoming with that information at first. It took them several days before explaining why PSN was offline and two more days before it confirmed the security breach.

Sony said the attack happened between April 1 and April 19 into its servers in San Diego. But the vulnerability that the attacker was able to exploit was also known.

The information on the servers were the names, birthday, address, password and credit card info. Sony said that the credit card info were encrypted but the rest are not. Password are not exactly encrypted but where transformed using a cryptographic hash function.

Sony said that only 10 million customers have entered their credit card info.

But the story gets better. News has came out recently that Sony was actually using outdated software on its servers.

Security experts learned months ago that Sony was using outdated version of the Apache Web Server that was unpatched and had no firewalls installed.

Sony is just digging itself into a big hole and is really alienating users. First the Rootkit which was a really invasive copy-protection scheme that modified users computers which could make a user's computer susceptible to attack. Then not informing users of the PSN attack right away and now finding out that the servers were not even protected.

Would Sony recover from all this mess? Sure, in time. They have enough money to ride it out and hopefully fix all of these. In the meantime, they are facing a huge lawsuit.

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