Pop star Michael Jackson had a strong heart and was a “fairly healthy” 50-year-old, according to an autopsy report obtained in the US.
His weight was in the acceptable range for a man of his height, according to the Associated Press.
But the singer, who died of a heart attack in June, had punctured arms, tattooed lips and eyebrows and suffered from lung damage and some arthritis.
Jackson’s death was ruled as homicide caused by a powerful anaesthetic.
Cosmetic surgery
The Los Angeles coroner disclosed in August that Propofol and the sedative Lorazepam were the “primary drugs responsible for Mr Jackson’s death”.
The drugs were administered by Jackson’s physician Dr Conrad Murray, and the verdict has been considered likely to increase the chances of criminal charges being brought against his doctors.
According to the document, Jackson’s most serious health problem was his chronically inflamed lungs, but this was not serious enough to be a contributing factor to his death.
The post mortem did not uncover any physical problems that may have limited Jackson’s ability to perform.
“His overall health was fine,” said Dr Zeev Kain of the University of California, who reviewed the report for AP but was not involved in the post-mortem examination.
“The results are in normal limits,” he added.
The report also revealed that Jackson had a number of scars on his body, including behind his ears and beside each of his nostrils.
Dr Kain concluded they were likely to have been caused by cosmetic surgery, while others, including on the knee, were likely to have been created by medical procedures.
The document also states that the singer was bald at the front of his head and had what appeared to be a dark tattoo stretching across his head.
His remaining hair was described as short and tightly-curled, it added.
The coroner reported that Jackson had depigmentation of the skin around his face, chest, abdomen and arms.
The full autopsy report has yet to be officially released to the public, but the conclusion that Jackson’s death was homicide has been disclosed.
Jackson’s death was a homicide
October 1st, 2009Neve Campbell in ”Scream” sequel
September 26th, 2009
Neve Campbell will return for “Scream 4”.
The 35-year-old actress has apparently inked a deal to continue as Sidney Prescott in the fourth installment of the Dimension series, which begins filming in the spring.
David Arquette and Courtney Cox will also return, playing Dewey Riley and Gail Weathers.
There were rumours that Campbell would not return, and that Sidney would be killed off. Arquette said at the time that he held out hope for her return.
The series, which parodied slasher movie conventions has been a huge hit for Dimension, and Bob Weinstein is revving up franchises and genre films for the innovative company’s latest batch of productions.
New Michael Jackson’s Documentary.
September 22nd, 2009Michael Jackson’s ‘This Is It’ documentary film has been confirmed to be released globally on October 27.

The film, pictured, which shows Jackson in preparation for his ‘This Is It’ tour before his death in June, will be premiered in over 25 locations across the globe.
The London premiere will take place at 1am (BST) on October 28 at the Odeon Cinema in Leicester Square. It will be screened at the same time as the Los Angeles premiere (taking place at 6pm local time on October 27).
Following the premiere, UK audiences will be able to see the film on October 28 for a limited two-week run.
Tickets for the film go on sale worldwide on September 27, with UK audiences able to buy tickets at cinemas nationwide from 12.01am.
The first public screenings of ‘This Is It’ will also be coordinated, with the debut Los Angeles showing set for 9pm, the first in New York at midnight and the first in London at 4am.
Lady Gaga on MTV Video Music Awards 2009
September 10th, 2009Will Lady Gaga win Best New Artist at the 2009 Video Music Awards? Interested music fans can still squeeze in their votes. This year’s choices offer an interesting assortment of styles and visuals.
With a handful of other Moonman nominations including one for Video of the Year, Lady Gaga’s “Poker Face” seems to be the favorite in this crowd. With strong vocals, stunning visuals, and satiric humor, Lady Gaga will give both Britney and Beyonce a definite run for the year’s top award.
But don’t count the boys out of the competition just yet. Three of the vids explore different versions of the ultimate male fantasy. 3OH!3’s “Don’t Trust Me” offers an unlikely sci-fi tale about the last 2 men on earth who must deal with an endless supply of beautiful women. Asher Roth’s “I Love College” offers a beer-soaked remembrance of the good old fraternity days. And Drake’s “Best I Ever Had” mixes men’s favorite pastimes – sports and well-endowed ladies.
The strongest contender from the men, however, is Kid Cudi’s “Day and Nite.” This video is a visual masterpiece that juxtaposes cartoon imagery on camera footage to create a fantasy world that feels both familiar and brand new. With a catchy groove and strong lyrics, “Day and Nite” may be just clever enough to topple the Haus of Gaga.
Worm attack on Wordpress!
September 7th, 2009A worm is circulating that can post malware and spam to some WordPress blogs using outdated versions of the blogging software, according to a post by Matt Mullenweg, founding developer of WordPress.
The worm can be tough to catch, as Mullenweg explains: “it registers a user, uses a security bug (fixed earlier in the year) to allow evaluated code to be executed through the permalink structure, makes itself an admin, then uses JavaScript to hide itself when you look at users page, attempts to clean up after itself, then goes quiet so you never notice while it inserts hidden spam and malware into your old posts.”
The vulnerability allowing the attack was discovered August 11, at which point WordPress encouraged users to upgrade to version 2.8.4. However, many people have yet to upgrade, and reports online indicate the worm is making dubious progress by the hour.
The worm does not affect the current version 2.8.4 and the one prior to it. And it only affects people who host their own WordPress blog. Blogs hosted on WordPress.com are unaffected.
Danger of virtual communication
September 3rd, 2009Although Facebook is a great tool for relationship building, it all too often can have the opposite effect when it comes to romance. Many users have admitted to stalking their partners on Facebook and psychologists have confirmed that the site can increase jealousy in relationships.
Although having Facebook ruin a relationship is tragic enough, a UK prosecutor is arguing that Facebook-related jealousy led one man to murder his partner.
Welsh-citizen Brian Lewis is accused of strangling his partner Hayley Jones to death in the home they shared with their four children. Prosecutors argue that the crime was precipitated by the amount of time Hayley spent on Facebook and her burgeoning social horizons.
Reportedly, Lewis told police that his partner had become secretive about her Facebook activity, preventing him from accessing the site and turning off the computer to keep him from viewing the content. Ten days before her death, Hayley changed her Facebook profile status from “in a realtionship” to “single.”
The trial is still ongoing. Although Lewis denies strangling his partner, he reportedly told authorities that he had strangled her in a 999 (UK equivalent of 911) call on the day of the murder.
This isn’t the first time Facebook has become part of the motive in a criminal trial, and sadly, we suspect it won’t be the last. One of the most common motives for murder is jealousy — there is even a name, crimes of passion — as online behavior starts to intersect more and more with our offline lives, it is only natural for the two to collide with sometimes tragic results.
Death of two firefighters
September 1st, 2009Authorities believe Ted Hall and Arnie Quinones were searching for a way out for personnel trapped at Camp 16 when overrun by fire. Their vehicle plunged down a mountain, killing the two men.
Reporting from Los Angeles and The Angeles National Forest — Everything that has made the Angeles National Forest wildfire so fierce and intractable — extreme heat, treacherous terrain, bone-dry conditions left by years of drought — seems to have converged on the lonely hilltop where Ted Hall and Arnie Quinones died.
Hidden in the forest, high above the Antelope Valley to the north and Los Angeles to the south, the hilltop is a hostile place now. By Monday, the flames had reduced the bluffs in every direction to a blackened moonscape, interrupted only by boulders, plumes of smoke and downed power lines draped like bunting from the gnarled limbs of charred trees. Dust devils, tiny tornadoes of ash and soot, raced up the hills, and small rodents overcome by smoke lay dead on the ground.
Until Sunday, this was home to tiny, remote prison Camp 16, where Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Tedmund “Ted” Hall, 47, and Firefighter Specialist Arnaldo “Arnie” Quinones, 34, had worked for eight years and four years, respectively, supervising inmates trained in wilderness protection.
Hall, who was married and the father of two grown sons, and Quinones, married and expecting his first child in the next few weeks, were killed Sunday when their truck went over the side of a dirt road and fell 800 feet into a canyon.
Selfless act
Although the investigation was just beginning Monday, state corrections officials said it appeared Hall and Quinones may have died while searching for an escape route for three corrections workers, other fire personnel and 55 inmates who rode out the fire inside the camp’s dining hall as flames roared up the adjacent hills.
Hall and Quinones were repositioning their truck on the small path, a stone’s throw from the camp, “apparently taking action to protect the camp facilities and personnel,” county Fire Chief P. Michael Freeman said in a statement. No one knows why the truck went off the road, he said; it appears, said Capt. Michael Brown, that Hall and Quinones may have been “overrun by fire.”
Investigators said they were not yet sure how all the survivors got down the mountain after the fire passed.
But California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Secretary Matthew Cate said in a statement that Hall and Quinones “are to be credited with helping to save the lives” of the others. “If it wasn’t for their selfless actions, the loss of life could have been greater,” Cate said.
Word of the deaths raced through firefighting circles Monday; between them, Hall and Quinones had been firefighters for 34 years and had worked in more than a dozen stations throughout L.A. County.
Tributes to the two men poured in, from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, from U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, from local elected officials. In Sacramento, the Assembly planned to adjourn in the firefighters’ honor. And at a fire camp near La Cañada Flintridge on Monday, a flag was lowered to half-staff and firefighters who were touched by the incident — those who knew Hall and Quinones or took part in retrieving their bodies — met privately with a chaplain and counselor.
Still, there was little time to mourn; the blaze, dubbed the Station fire, had ballooned overnight and was advancing in three directions.
“We all grieve together,” Brown said. “But we all understand the dangerous nature of our job. There is still a job to complete.”
Special place
Camp 16 was part of an unusual collaboration between the county and state corrections officials.
Roughly 100 state inmates were serving their sentences at the camp, one of six inmate camps in L.A. County. The men lived in a single-story dormitory now reduced to a concrete slab and cinder block walls, and many were trained in frontline wildland management, sent into wilderness areas that machines could not reach.
They hauled around sandbags to protect against winter floods, cleared hiking and running trails, “anything where additional hands are needed,” Brown said. Some of their most important work came during fire season, when they helped clear brush and establish breaks to halt advancing flames — under the watchful eye of Hall, who served as their superintendent, and Quinones, one of their foremen.
The camp positions are considered prestigious and are sought after within the department, said Battalion Chief Nick Duvally. Firefighters interviewed Monday said their work is invigorating but that flurries of intense activity are often followed by hours spent idling on fire lines. At the camps, Duvally said, “You are always on the edge.”
On Monday, reflecting the chaos surrounding the incident, abandoned hoses were still strewn around, and even getting to Camp 16 was hazardous. Tree limbs, still smoldering, had fallen across the access road, and flames licked at its edges wherever there was unburned foliage.
At the camp, east of Mt. Gleason and west of Mill Creek Summit, solemn-faced investigators from the Fire Department and the California Highway Patrol huddled on the dirt path where Hall and Quinones last drove.
The gates of the camp had been burned away, leaving jagged stumps on both sides of the path. The wind surged up the side of the ravine where Hall and Quinones died, coating investigators’ faces with soot, sweeping in swarms of bees and sending huge crows somersaulting through the air.
Officials said it was clear that Hall and Quinones had died during a harrowing firestorm.
Tough job
About half of the inmates housed at Camp 16 had been evacuated earlier in the weekend; the 55 who remained were trained in wildfire suppression, officials said.
When flames approached the facility, the prisoners, corrections employees and other personnel ran into a parking area, where they watched the structure burn, said corrections department spokeswoman Terry Thornton.
She said it appears that Hall and Quinones were looking for a way out when their truck slipped off the road. All inmates have been accounted for, officials said.
Quinones joined the county Fire Department in 1998 and graduated from the Fire Academy three years later.
He served at stations in Palmdale, Covina and La Cañada Flintridge and joined the crew at Camp 16 after being promoted to specialist in December 2005.
He is survived by his wife, Loressa, and his mother, Sonia Quinones.
Hall joined the department in April 1981 as a student worker before he had even been accepted into the academy.
After graduating in 1983, he served at a host of fire stations and facilities, including stations in Lakewood, Whittier, La Puente and La Cañada Flintridge.
He was promoted to captain in January 2001 and began working at Camp 16 a few months later.
He is survived by his wife, Katherine; sons Randall, 21, and Steven, 20; and his parents, Roland Ray and Donna Marie Hall.
County Fire Capt. Rudy Gilson on Monday recalled sharing eggs and sausage with Hall while battling another recent fire in the national forest. Hall spoke, as usual, about two things: fire tactics and his family, his colleague remembered.
“He spent every free moment with his family,” Gilson said. “Camping, get-togethers, motorcycle riding — anything outdoors. . . He lived life to the fullest.”
As the flames marched through the forest last weekend, Hall took pains to ensure that firefighters sent there to battle the blaze had cots to rest on and enough food and water.
“He was a person who would do anything for you,” said county Fire Investigator Gil Sanchez, as he stood on the charred hilltop Monday afternoon. Sanchez, a leader of the accident investigation, counted Hall among his close friends.
“He wanted to make sure everyone was taken care of — before he took care of his own needs,” Sanchez said. “This is taking a toll on all of us.”
Breach at Heartland Payment Systems
August 18th, 2009The indictment listing the charges against a 28-year-old Miami man sheds new light on how the government says a group of attackers penetrated the security of Heartland Payment Systems, Hannaford Bros. and 7-Eleven.
Roughly seven months after news broke of a breach at Heartland Payment Systems, 28-year-old Albert Gonzalez was indicted for cracking the company’s security.
But to hear authorities tell it, Heartland wasn’t the Miami man’s only victim. Among the others are 7-Eleven and Hannaford Brothers Co.
With the indictment has come some new information about the data breaches. Gonzalez was indicted along with two unidentified co-conspirators believed to be from Russia. A fourth individual, identified in the federal indictment only as P.T., was not charged in the case but is listed as a co-conspirator.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the group used computers around the globe to stage attacks and store malware and stolen information. In order to prepare, the group tested the strength of their malware by putting it up against approximately 20 different anti-virus programs.
“The attack took planning and organization, but ultimately it was done with relatively common attack techniques,” said Rohit Dhamankar, director of DVLabs at TippingPoint. “It just goes to show that even the most basic type of attack can do serious damage and enterprises need to be more vigilant about protecting the outward facing portions of their networks.” According to the government, beginning in Oct. 2006, Gonzalez and his partners began researching the credit and debit card systems used by their victims.
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Once inside the corporate networks, the gang conducted reconnaissance to find credit and debit card numbers and other information. The group used sniffer programs to steal the data, and would communicate via instant message while attacks were in progress and advise each other as to how to navigate the corporate networks to find data, authorities said.
At the time of the Heartland incident, the company processed millions of credit and debit card transactions daily. Beginning on or about December 26, 2007 , the company was hit with a SQL injection attack on its corporate network that resulted in malware being placed on its payment processing system and the theft of more than 130 million credit and debit card numbers and corresponding card data.
It was the same story with Hannaford, which reported a malicious Trojan was programmed to pilfer data from the magnetic stripe of credit and debit cards being swiped at Hannaford’s checkout counters. This is believed to have happened around November 2007. The attack led to the compromise of 4.2 million in credit and debit card numbers and related data.
Before that was 7-Eleven. The chain of convenience stores was hit with a SQL injection attack around August 2007. After swiping the data, they sent the information to computer servers they operated in California, Illinois, Latvia, the Netherlands and Ukraine.
In addition to these attacks, Gonzalez is currently awaiting trial for his alleged involvement in the TJX hack, as well as an attack targeting the computers of the Dave & Buster’s restaurant chain in New York.
The fact that some, if not all, of the companies were PCI DSS compliant before the attacks sparked questions about efficacy of PCI regulations. Steve Dauber, vice president of marketing at RedSeal, noted that PCI audits are only the beginning.
“PCI is actually a pretty reasonable set of basic security recommendations,” he said. “The problem is that businesses mistake passing a PCI audit with being PCI compliant. Audits aren’t comprehensive by nature— they will never catch every potential error in implementation. More importantly, audits occur at a point in time, but your IT infrastructure changes constantly. So even if you do pass your audit, you may fall out of compliance the next week. If you want to benefit from PCI, you need to maintain compliance both comprehensively and continuously.”
Microsoft-Nokia alliance
August 12th, 2009Microsoft and Nokia, long adversaries in mobile phone technology, have agreed to a partnership to equip many Nokia cellphones with the Microsoft Office software, according to a person with knowledge of the agreement.
Microsoft’s lucrative Office line faces an emerging competitive threat from free Web-based word processing, spreadsheet and other software, especially from Google. And consumers are increasingly using their smartphones to do tasks that once could be done only on personal computers, Microsoft’s stronghold.
The alliance, expected to be announced Wednesday, seems to be a pragmatic step by both companies, as each tries to cope with growing competitive threats.
Nokia, the world’s largest cellphone maker, is struggling in the smartphone market against rivals led by the iPhone from Apple and the BlackBerry by Research in Motion. The competition is increasing with the recent entry of phones using the Android software from Google.
Neither company would comment. The two companies said in an advisory that they would hold a conference call on Wednesday.
Nokia and Microsoft have been rivals for years in cellphone operating systems, with Nokia adopting Symbian software and shunning Windows Mobile. Despite few details, the Microsoft-Nokia alliance apparently extends only to Office.
Stress – a most common hair loss factor.
August 8th, 2009Dermatologists say that although life’s normal ups and downs aren’t enough to precipitate it, women can lose up to 50 percent of their hair after an unusually stressful event. Dr. Rebecca Euwer, a Dallas-based dermatologist, said that some of the more common causes are childbirth, surgery or a death in the family.
This type of hair loss can occur both in men and women. But most of the known cases are reported by women.
About 90 percent of hair is in the growing phase. Most of the remaining hair is in the resting phase, where it remains for about three months. When people suffer physical or psychological trauma, it shocks the hair follicles into a resting phase.
People do not notice the effects until three months later, when it begins to fall out.
However, there’s a chance that women older than 30 could be experiencing the female equivalent of male-pattern baldness.if this is the case, only hair on top of the head will thin. If it is stress-related, the sides and back of the scalp will also be affected.
Then there are women hit with the double-whammy: both stress-induced hair loss and natural thinning with age. In these cases, doctors might need to prescribe Rogaine, an over-the-counter hair regrowth treatment.
Not all hair loss is stress- or age-related. Excessive styling or harsh treatments can also damage the hair, causing it to fall out. And a sudden loss of hair may signal a more serious condition, such as diabetes or lupus.