The most famous hacker in the world launches Olyseum a Twitter football and sport
It aims to bring as never before to the highest international level athletes to their followers. The first ambassadors of the platform are the players Andres Iniesta, Ivan de la Pena and Carles Puyol.
Iniesta Olyseum app launches with exclusive and intimate content
You will have its own community in the new social network, driven alongside Puyol and De la Peña and aims to bring major international cracks his fans.
Iniesta, Puyol De la Peña and drive Olyseum, the social network connecting sports fans with their idols
Footballers Andres Iniesta, Ivan de la Pena and Carles Puyol promoted from today the launch of Olyseum, the social network that aims to bring the athletes of the highest international level to their fans through a platform that allows them to find information, access to unpublished content and interact like never before.
Review: Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World
Werner Herzog's latest documentary, "Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World" should have been a documentary series, and may have started with that structure in mind. Presented by Netscout, the film offers a survey of the internet, its implications, and the questions surrounding it, utilizing interviews with various experts, probed by Herzog and emitting the wonder and enthusiasm his interviewees are apt to give themselves over to. Illuminating the humanity among internet afficionados may be the film's greatest strength, as its coverage winds up being uneven and at times only skims the surface.
Companies around the world are becoming victims of scammers who take the identities of entrepreneurs. In Canada, this means that billions of dollars are lost each year.
What Werner Herzog’s new film ‘Lo and Behold’ reveals about the internet
As the internet makes its way into more aspects of our everyday lives, Werner Herzog takes a closer look at the ethics of information flows in a new documentary. Alexander Nazaryan meets the German filmmaker
Do not look at the photos of the Nikki Catsouras car crash that remain on the internet, lingering there maliciously despite the efforts of her parents to scrub them through ReputationDefender and, more simply, pleas to human decency. Look at pictures of Rollerblading dachshunds, click through a BuzzFeed quiz about Full House, read an article about Donald Trump’s grooming habits. Take a walk, for God’s sake. The photos of Catsouras’s mangled body hanging out of a car, head split open – as well as the story of how those photos ended up being disseminated on the internet – represent the most debased instincts of humanity. I gave in and looked, thinking they couldn’t be that bad. I was wrong.