Author: Jamie Welch, Senior Editor

Mininova Adds Another Billion Torrent Downloads

Mininova, one of the world’s most visited BitTorrent sites, broke another download record today. Just a few hours ago the download counter displayed a staggering 8,000,000,000 downloads. That’s enough for everyone on planet earth to have one – and then some. Founded in January 2005, Mininova quickly became one of the most successful torrent sites. With millions of daily users the site is now listed among the top 100 most frequently visited websites on the entire Internet, and its traffic still continues to grow. When combined, Mininova’s visitors have been downloading well over 10 million torrents a day and performing an equal number of searches on the site. These millions of downloads add up quickly and since the birth of the site a massive 8 billion torrents have been downloaded by Mininova users. via Mininova Adds Another Billion Torrent Downloads | TorrentFreak...

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You've gotta like Likaholix

I like things.  Do you like things?  Do you like so many things that you would consider yourself a likaholic?  If so, then you may wish to try out a new service called Likaholix. Likaholix allows you to share, discuss and discover your likes with people you know. Basically, you tell  Likaholix what you like. Type in the name of an item, then it will search Likaholix for it.  You can then like it and leave a comment. Did you know your friends like the things they like?  Join Likaholix today to find out! Likaholix is in private beta, however we have some invite codes available for you.  Just head on over to http://go.cosmicthings.com/likaholix/ and we almost guarantee there is an account available for...

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Cosmic Things – Cosmic Interactions Happen Every Day!

Cosmic Things is a new social network for Worcester Preparatory School Students and Faculty to be social with each other in a protected environment. You can post pictures, videos, music, and blogs.  You can even participate in forums!  Your profile page is completely customizable, and you can add what matters to you. Here is a section off of the Cosmic Things site: At Cosmic Things, we believe in allowing students and Faculty to interact with each other, share stories, tips, photos, videos, just be social! So go start creating your profile, joining groups and many other things today! Start exploring right now! Sign up today by clicking here: Cosmic Things – Cosmic Interactions Happen Every...

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FCC moving toward National Broadband

The Federal Communications Commission said today that it has taken the first step toward developing a National Broadband plan to ensure that all Americans have access to high-speed Internet connections. A CNET report notes, however, that the process could get bogged down by special interest groups who may use the opportunity to push their agendas on topics such as Net Neutrality. The FCC’s announcement today calls for input from “all stakeholders: consumers, industry, large and small businesses, non-profits, the disabilities community, governments at the federal, state, local and tribal levels, and all other interested parties.” That’s a pretty big task and I can only imagine the amount of input the agency will receive – making the Feb. 17, 2010 deadline set by Congress that much more challenging. Still, it’s an important step for the nation. Internet access should be treated more like a utility – just like landline telephones and electricity – now that even government agencies send people to their Web sites to do things like process claims, request information or download forms. via FCC takes first step toward National Broadband plan | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com...

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Microsoft: 3% of e-mail is stuff we want; the rest is spam

Spam makes up close to 100 percent of all e-mail traffic on the Internet, according to Microsoft. In a new security report, Microsoft said that 97 percent of e-mails sent were destined for the junk folder, though most never made it to their destinations thanks to server-side filtering. As usual, the latest waves of spam are rife with advertisements for pharmaceutical products (48.6 percent of the total). Microsoft noted that a larger percentage of spam was blocked by its own Exchange Hosted Filtering (EHF) services in the second half of 2008 for most categories, with some 40 percent of “non-sexual” pharmacy spam being blocked (apparently, sexual pharmacy spam figured out how to get around EHF filters during that time—Microsoft recorded a drop in blocked e-mails from this category). While our inboxes sometimes feel flooded with spam, Microsoft’s numbers are higher than those from other firms. MessageLabs Intelligence recently said that spam had spiked in February (thanks to Valentine’s Day-related messages), accounting for 79.5 percent of all e-mail traffic before settling down to an average of 73.3 percent for the month as a whole. This was lower than the 74.6 percent recorded in January. At the same time, however, MessageLabs noted that large botnets were beginning to increase spam volume since the McColo shutdown last November, which temporarily lowered spam volume. Symantec’s latest State of Spam report (PDF) released today...

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