Victorantos

asp.net web developer on the way to conquer a little bit the Internet

Air Moldova is building a booking web application using asp.net

clock December 10, 2008 12:59 by author victorantos

 I hope they will remediate dot net errros soon...

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My SEO results for victorantos.com

clock December 5, 2008 16:35 by author victorantos

Daniel Braithwaite, IT RecruitmentConsultant, from Computer FuturesSolutions called me, Yesterday.

 He was proposing me a dot net job in west midlands area. I refused this job, because it was not a web developer (asp.net C#) position. It was a windows forms C# developer job.

So, he then  told me about a SEO position. I was interested, becasue I like to do online marketing and search engine optimization.

In about 2 minutes I've impressed him with my SEO results for my company website. Take a look on my results.

 Some SEO statistics for my website :

4 December 2008
Romanian ASP.net C# Web Developer         -  #1 on google.co.uk
asp.net romania freelancer               - #1 on google.co.uk
asp.net C# contractor                    - #5 on google.co.uk
asp.net C# web developer uk              -on second page of google.co.uk
asp.net C#  contractor  uk             - #12 on google.co.uk(www.victorantos.com)
asp.net C#  contractor  uk             - #2 on google.co.uk(www.blog.victorantos.com)
asp.net C#  IT contractor uk           -#1 ongoogle.co.uk(www.blog.victorantos.com)

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Picture of the year 2007 on Wikipedia

clock December 5, 2008 16:30 by author victorantos

After voting on wikipedia

#1 – 84 votes; Broadway Tower in Cotswolds,England, UK   - was selected as picture of the year 2007

 

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Romania Hacker Indicted For Breaching NASA Computers

clock January 5, 2008 21:29 by author victorantos

December 1st, 2006

Los Angeles, CA - A grand jury has indicted a Romanian man for hacking into more than 150 different government computers, including machines in NASA, the Department of Energy, and the U.S. Navy.

NASA reportedly suffered $1.36 million in losses as a result of the intrusions and loss of data. The DoE and the Navy together reported a loss of near $100,000.

Victor Faur, 26, of Arad, Romania, is the leader of the hacking group called The WhiteHat Team, according to Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the United States Attorney's Office in the Central District of California. The group's alleged goal is to hack into U.S. government computers because of their reputation as some of the most secure machines in the world, the USAO reported in a written release.

Faur faces 10 counts -- one count of conspiracy and nine counts of computer intrusion. If he is convicted on all 10 counts, he would face a maximum sentence of 54 years in federal prison.

Right now, Faur is being prosecuted by the Romanian government for unrelated computer crimes, according to Mrozek. He said he is not sure what the specific Romanian charges are.

Mrozek said the next step is to get Faur onto U.S. soil so he can be prosecuted here. But that will have to wait until his Romanian prosecution is complete.

"It is our intention to get him into the United States to face the charges, either by extradition or by other means," he said, adding that Faur could turn himself in to U.S. authorities or he could be picked up if he ever tries to cross country borders. "The timing largely depends on what happens with the Romanian prosecution."

In the indictment, the government alleges that Faur hacked into and took control of government computers, causing the compromised machines to display messages "that flaunted the computer intrusion." Faur also allegedly forced the computers to act as chat rooms where he could communicate with other members of the WhiteHat Team.

The government also claims Faur searched the compromised computers for passwords that he could use to gain unauthorized access to other computers. Some of the computers were used to collect and process data from spacecraft in Earth orbit or deep space, to evaluate new scientific technologies, and to collect, store and analyze other scientific data.

In a written statement, the U.S. Attorney's Office said "NASA, the Energy Department, and the Navy could not rely upon the integrity of the data on the hacked computers. Therefore, systems had to be rebuilt, and scientists and engineers had to manually communicate with spacecraft."

The investigation was run by NASA's Office of the Inspector General, the Department of Energy's Office of Inspector General, and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.

© InfoWeek News

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Wi-Fi Startup to Pick Up Where Google Left Off in SF

clock January 4, 2008 20:30 by author victorantos

Wireless networking startup Meraki plans to deliver free wireless Internet access, supported by advertising, across San Francisco by the end of the year, it announced Friday.

An earlier attempt by Google and EarthLink to offer free city-wide Wi-Fi access in San Francisco foundered in August when EarthLink pulled out. They had planned a two-tier service, with faster, paid access provided by EarthLink and a more limited, advertising-funded service to be offered by Google. The search engine giant is also an investor in Meraki.

Meraki will base the service on an existing project covering parts of the city, Free the Net, which has signed up 40,000 users over an area of 5 square kilometers since it began last March.

To avoid the need for extensive cabling, Meraki will build the backbone of the network using a mesh network of solar-powered wireless repeaters installed on rooftops. The nodes will use some of their wireless capacity to offer Internet access to those nearby, and the rest to haul traffic back, via adjacent nodes, to the network's core.

The company is looking for city residents willing to put a repeater on their roof. Those hosting a repeater will get free access to the service -- but so will their neighbors -- although for them, the signal may not be as strong. Although devices are shared, Meraki aims to deliver data rates of around 1M bps (bits per second) to each user.

Meraki will pay the cost of rolling out the service, and no public funds are involved, it said. Investors have offered the company an additional US$20 million in venture capital to fund the move, it announced Friday.

Ozone in Paris offers a similar wireless Internet service based on a network of wireless repeaters. Its service is only free for those who host repeaters, though: others must pay ¬18 (US$26) a month.

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