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No, hackers don’t have webcam vids of you enjoying p0rno. Don’t give them any $$s Ҁ’ The Register

Scam alert: No, hackers don’t have webcam vids of you enjoying p0rno. Don’t give them any $$s Ҁ’ The Register

I got this spam message. No I haven't used that password in years. I promptly deleted that email.

I hope you enjoy the inappropriate videos that they are threatening to send out, even though I don't visit those kind of sites, I use Linux, keep my kernel up to date, and have a post it note taped over my laptop webcam and don't have internet at home.

What is the safe distance to live from a high voltage electric tower? I read that electromagnetic waves can reach up to 200 meters.

What is the safe distance to live from a high voltage electric tower? I read that electromagnetic waves can reach up to 200 meters.

"Do me a favor: Go outside, look up at the sky and if it's daytime and if there aren't any clouds, you'll see a large yellow hot thing. Don't stare at it for too long as it can damage your vision. That's called the Sun and it emits far more low-level electromagnetic radiation in a single day than you'll ever receive in a lifetime living near powerlines. If you are not concerned about the Sun and its myriads effects upon you and your health in general, I wouldn't worry too much, if at all, about living near high voltage lines."

How Useful Is Fear?

How Useful Is Fear?

"One reason we struggle with fear is that we’re simultaneously too primitive and too evolved for our own good. Our lizard brains are ruthlessly efficient: Signals speed to the threat-sensing amygdala within 74 milliseconds of the slightest hint of danger. This speed has, over eons, helped save us from extinction. But it’s also led to plenty of false alarms."

"Our higher consciousness is supposed to help us sort out these threats, but at times it seems more committed to spinning out anxious what-ifs about imperiled loved ones and unattended stoves. An entire body of risk-perception research has detailed just how bad we are at figuring out which dangers are worth worrying about. We tend to overestimate the threat of dying by lightning, flood, or murder, while underestimating the much more immediate threats posed by asthma, stroke, and diabetes, among other unsexy hazards."

β€˜The Trains Are Slower Because They Slowed the Trains Down’

β€˜The Trains Are Slower Because They Slowed the Trains Down’

There has been a lot of talk about improving safety, to avoid preventable deaths in all sectors of American life these days. But saving lives has a real cost -- often it means slowing down business, and making it more expensive to get things done. Safety is important, but so getting through the business of every day life. It's important that weight the safety benefits against the cost of saving a few lives. A preventable death of a loved one is always tragic, but sometimes it's better to let a few people die preventable deaths, for the betterment of society.

"Benjamin Kabak, who writes the subway-focused blog Second Ave. Sagas and has been one of the few transit advocates raising concerns about the subway’s slowdown, agrees with the operator’s assessment. β€œI don’t think they’re wrong in citing safety,” Kabak says of MTA management, β€œbut I think there’s a question as to whether their reaction is commensurate to the problem.” He doesn’t see a safety benefit to the vast majority of timers installed around the system. As an example, Kabak recently noticed the 6 train crawling between 51st Street and Grand Central on a regular basis. He suspects a timer has recently been installed there."