Friday, 8 November 2013

Fawad Khan and Sonam Kapoor cast in Bollywood film

Fawad Khan to make his Bollywood debut. PHOTO: FILE
Fawad Khan’s performance as the handsome and brooding Ashar in TV show Humsafarmade him not just a national heartthrob but  also seems to have got him attention across the border. Like others before him, Fawad is now headed to Bollywood!
The actor will be seen in a lead role opposite Sonam Kapoor in the Hindi re-make of 1980s Hrishikesh Mukherjee film Khubsoorat.
The film tells the breezy tale of an extrovert – a feisty girl (played by Sonam) who brings about changes in the regimented atmosphere of a household controlled firmly by its overbearing matriarch, according to apunkachoice.com.
While Sonam plays the motor-mouth, Fawad will expectedly play the bachelor who falls for her. We cannot wait to see the on-screen chemistry between these absolutely gorgeous people!
Rumour has it that Alia Bhatt was chosen to play the female lead but has now been replaced by Sonam, according to Oye! Times.
The shooting of Khubsoorat has already begun in Rajasthan. The film is being directed by Shashanka Ghosh and produced by Sonam’s father Anil Kapoor.

Most popular Adobe hacked passwords

Most popular Adobe hacked passwords
By: Salma Tantawi
You would think coming up with a strong password has become a basic security step with all the tips provided by the services you sign up for. It’s not that complicated; all you have to do is pick a mix of characters, numbers and maybe symbols to have a secure-enough password.
However, it turns out that “1234” and “abcd” are still very popular passwords among internet users. Recently-hacked Adobe had the data of more than 38 million users compromised in October, which revealed that among the hacked users’ accounts were some passwords that were basically asking for it.
These are a list of the most popular passwords among hacked accounts:
  • 123456
  • 123456789
  • password
  • adobe123
  • 12345678
  • qwerty
  • 1234567
  • 111111
  • photoshop
  • 123123
  • 1234567890
  • 000000
  • abc123
  • 1234
  • adobe1
  • macromedia
  • azerty
  • iloveyou
  • aaaaaa
  • 654321

Kim Kardashian urged think twice about marriage to Kanye West

Kim Kardashian urged think twice about marriage to Kanye West
Kim Kardashian has been urged to think twice before marrying Kanye West.
The 33-year-old reality TV star has been advised by her close pals to consider calling off her engagement to the 36-year-old rapper - whom she shares four-month-old daughter North with - due to his controlling attitude. 
The 'Black Skinhead' hitmaker popped the question to the brunette beauty last month at the ATT baseball park in San Francisco, but friends believe Kim was functioning 'like a robot' at his command.
A source told Life Style magazine: 'Nothing about the engagement was Kim. It was completely not like her to be proposed to in the baseball stadium.
'He's calling the shots about the wedding, the house they're constructing, everything down to what shoes she's going to wear to events.'
However, Kim doesn't believe her beau is making decisions for her and friends are confident it's because she's so wrapped up in love at the moment. 
A source explained: 'Kim doesn't think she's being controlled. She's deciding to do whatever Kanye wants.
'She's so in the Kanye bubble right now.'
Meanwhile, the 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians' star recently told Kanye he can have whatever he wants when it comes to their nuptials, but she wants to choose her wedding gown.

Twitter shares to debut on New York Stock Exchange

Twitter shares to debut on New York Stock Exchange
A tweet sent from the micro-blogging network said Twitter would offer 70 million shares on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday.
With a price tag of $26 (19 euros) per share, bidding is expected to raise up to $1.8 billion for the company – a sign of strong investor demand for the mostly highly anticipated US public float since Facebook in May 2012. The share price is above the previously anticipated range of $23 - $25.
The initial public offering (IPO) has valued the messaging service at $14.1 billion, which may possibly blow out to $14.4 billion if it exercises an over-allotment option, which it is widely tipped to do.
Should the company over-allot, it would become the second-largest technology IPO since Facebook went public and made $16 billion and Google's 2004 offer, which, according to research firm Dealogic, raised $1.92 billion.
Between 12.8 and 14.5 percent of the company's shares are set to be traded publicly. The remainder will be held by Twitter's founders and a small number of early investors.
Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group who valued Twitter shares at $29 this week, said the stock appeared to have high investor support and has the potential to close at over $30 a share on its first day.
He went on to warn of the possibility of volatile trading: 'there is still so much uncertainty and it's so difficult to even identify how big the opportunity is.'
The messaging service is hugely popular amongst heads of state and celebrities, boasting around 230 million users, but it still has to convince investors – Twitter has lost more than $440 million since 2010.
The company is expecting to reach profitability by delivering advertisements to users via promoted tweets, and from data analytics.
'Twitter needs to step up and deliver on the expectations that are fueling its valuation, and show that it has what it takes to provide a sustainable business model,' Eden Zoller from the British-based consultancy firm Ovum commented.
Twitter will trade on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday under the ticker TWTR.

Strongest typhoon of the year slams Philippines

Strongest typhoon of the year slams Philippines
MANILA: One of the most powerful typhoons ever recorded slammed into the Philippines early Friday, with one weather expert warning of catastrophic damage.
The US Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center shortly before Typhoon Haiyan's landfall said its maximum sustained winds were 314 kilometers per hour (195 mph), with gusts up to 379 kilometers per hour (235 mph).
‘195-mile-per-hour winds, there aren't too many buildings constructed that can withstand that kind of wind,’ said Jeff Masters, a former hurricane meteorologist who is meteorology director at the private firm Weather Underground.
Masters said the storm had been poised to be the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded at landfall. He warned of ``catastrophic damage.''
Local authorities reported having troubles reaching colleagues in the landfall area.
The local weather bureau had a lower reading on the storm's power, saying its speed at landfall in Eastern Samar province's Guiuan township had sustained winds at 235 kilometers (147 miles) per hour, with gusts of 275 kph (170 mph). The bureau takes measures based on longer periods of time.
Authorities in Guiuan could not be reached for word of any deaths or damage, regional civil defense chief Rey Gozon told DZBB radio. Forecaster Mario Palafox with the national weather bureau said it had lost contact with its staff in the landfall area.
The storm was not expected to directly hit the flood-prone capital, Manila, further north.
More than 125,000 people had been evacuated from towns and villages in the typhoon's path, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said.
Haiyan's wind strength at landfall had been expected to beat out Hurricane Camille, which was 305 kilometers per hour (190 mph) at landfall in the United States in 1969, Masters said.
The only tiny bright side is that it's a fast-moving storm, so flooding from heavy rain _ which usually causes the most deaths from typhoons in the Philippines _ may not be as bad, Masters said.
‘The wind damage should be the most extreme in Phillipines history,’ he said.
After hitting Guiuan on the southern tip of Samar island, about 650 kilometers (405 miles) southeast of Manila, the typhoon pummeled nearby Leyte island.
``I think this is the strongest so far since the 1960s,'' Southern Leyte Gov. Roger Mercado said on ABS-CBN television. ``This is really a wallop. All roads are impassable due to fallen trees.''
A reporter for the network in the Tacloban city was drenched in the pounding rain and said he was wearing a helmet as protection against flying debris. Visibility was so poor that only his silhouette could be seen through the thick curtain of water.
Television images showed a street under knee-deep floodwater carrying debris that had been blown down by the fierce winds. Tin sheets ripped off from buildings roofs were flying above the street.
Weather forecaster Gener Quitlong said the typhoon was not losing much of its strength because there is no large land mass to slow it down since the region is comprised of islands with no tall mountains.
Officials in Cebu province have shut down electric service to the northern part of the province to avoid electrocutions in case power pylons are toppled, said assistant regional civil defense chief Flor Gaviola.
President Benigno Aquino III assured the public of war-like preparations, with three C-130 air force cargo planes and 32 military helicopters and planes on standby, along with 20 navy ships.
The typhoon _ the 24th serious storm to hit the Philippines this year _ is forecast to barrel through the Philippines' central region Friday and Saturday before blowing toward the South China Sea over the weekend, heading toward Vietnam. (AP)

PM Nawaz announces to make Awaran ‘model district’

PM Nawaz announces to make Awaran ‘model district’
AWARAN: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, has announced to make earthquake-hit Awaran a 'model district', referring to the one like Islamabad and Lahore.
Speaking to media after visiting quake-hit Awaran, the prime minister said that both the federal government and provincial government would join hands to rehabilitate quake affectees.
Nawaz Sharif lauded the efforts of Pakistan Army in relief activities. He said that the army would stand by the government in rehabilitation process.
‘The people of Pakistan must know that their government did not ask for any foreign aid and the funds for rehabilitation would be provided by the federal and provincial governments,’ he said.
Nawaz said that there is no alternate of loss of human lives, however, he added that for compensation Rs 0.5 million would be given to the family of the victims killed in the natural disaster while Rs 0.15 would be granted to injured people.
The prime minister further said that roads would be built in Awaran and electricity would be provided to the district by installing solar energy plants.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif also appealed to estranged Baloch leaders and militants to become part of the nation building process and enter into the national mainstream.

Snowden aide Harrison takes refuge in Berlin

Snowden aide Harrison takes refuge in Berlin
National security leakers lead a precarious existence these days. Julian Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for over a year now, unable to leave for fear of being arrested by British authorities and extradited to Sweden as part of a sexual assault investigation. Assange believes that going to Sweden would be the first step in his extradition to the US and an eventual trial there.
Meanwhile, NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden is under constant guard in Moscow after having received temporary asylum in Russia. For now, at least, Snowden has managed to avoid the fate that befell Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning, who was convicted on espionage charges and sentenced in June to 35 years in prison for leaking 250,000 US diplomatic cables.
Snowden's good fortune is largely due to British journalist Sarah Harrison, a Wikileaks researcher who helped the former NSA contractor escape the long arm of the US Justice Department. Having assisted one of the US government's top public enemies, she has now taken refuge in Berlin, reticent to return to her native England for fear of being detained by authorities under the UK Terrorism Act.
On Wednesday, Harrison published a letter calling for whistle-blowers to be shielded from prosecution, saying that 'giving us the truth is not a crime.'
'Wikileaks continues to fight for the protection of sources,' Harrison wrote. 'We have won the battle for Snowden's immediate future, but the broader war continues.'
'Snowden is safe and protected'
When Snowden first fled to Hong Kong after leaking his trove of NSA documents to US journalists Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald, Harrison flew to China at the behest of Wikileaks to help secure the whistle-blower's safe passage and prevent his extradition to the US.
While not a lawyer by trade, she had acquired expertise on extradition matters through the case of Assange with whom she both worked and had been romantically involved.
'I'm sure that if Julian hadn't been grounded at the embassy in London, he would have loved to have done it himself,' Jeremie Zimmermann told DW, referring to Snowden's susscessful asylum application in Russia.
Zimmermann is the spokesman and co-founder of the digital rights group La Quadrature du Net in France. He was a contributor to Assange's 2012 book 'Cypherpunks: Freedom and the Future of the Internet' and knows Harrison.
'I'm sure after [Assange], Sarah was the most competent,' he continued. 'She's a brilliant journalist and researcher and a brilliant person in general.'
Although Harrison didn't elaborate on why, exactly, she left Russia, she did write that the job of securing Snowden had been completed.
'Whilst Snowden is safe and protected until his asylum visa is due to be renewed in nine months time, there is still much work to be done,' Harrison said. 'The battle Snowden joined against the surveillance state and for government transparency is one that Wikileaks – and many others – have been fighting, and will continue to fight.'
Exile in Berlin
Harrison has joined a growing colony in Berlin of transparency-advocates-in-exile. Poitras, who has reported on the Snowden leaks for the Washington Post and Der Spiegel, and hacker and Wikileaks supporter Jacob Appelbaum, both reside in the German capital.
'Already in the few days I have spent in Germany, it is heartening to see the people joining together and calling for their government to do what must be done – to investigate NSA spying revelations and to offer Edward Snowden asylum,' Harrison wrote in her letter.
The outcry in Germany has reached a fever pitch in recent weeks. Reports from the summer about the NSA collecting millions of Germans' metadata have now been compounded by the revelation that Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone was also allegedly hacked.
'Berlin seems to be the place of choice right now if you consider the vibrant character of the public debate here, and I'm referring to the last two front pages of Der Spiegel that sounded quite serious about it,' Zimmermann said. In a recent Der Spiegel issue, the news magazine published reports based on Snowden's leaks, detailing possible NSA eavesdropping on Chancellor Merkel's cell phone. The publication has also called for Snowden to be granted asylum.
Fear of UK Terrorism Act
The daughter of a middle class British family, Harrison's father is a former executive at a clothing retailer and her mother works with children who have learning difficulties. After studying English literature at Queen Mary, she took a job as an international event manager, but ultimately decided to pursue journalism.
Harrison received an internship with the Centre for Investigative Journalism in London in 2009 and landed a junior research position at the Bureau of Investigative Journalism in 2010. Through her work at the bureau, she came into contact with Assange and later began working for Wikileaks as a researcher.
Taking the advice of legal advisers, Harrison has decided to stay in Germany, for fear of being detained in her native England under the UK Terrorism Act. In August, Glenn Greenwald's boyfriend, David Miranda, was detained under the act for nine hours at London's Heathrow Airport. Miranda had been on his way from Berlin back to Brazil - where he and Greenwald live - having transported materials between the Guardian journalist and Poitras.
Under the Terrorism Act, police can detain and question an individual in order to determine whether or not they are a 'terrorist.' According to Harrison and other transparency activists, by detaining Miranda, London effectively defined national security reporting as 'terrorism.'
'The problem is she's now part of this net of suspicion,' Zimmerman said.
'It is likely that she would be suspected of the same kind of nonsensical charges if she even stepped foot here,' he continued. 'So in a way, until further notice, she might be constrained to exile, the same way that Snowden, Greenwald, Poitras, [and] Appelbaum are today.'