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dissabte, 16 d’abril del 2016

Venden los datos privados de más de un millón de usuarios de una web porno

Laura Tejerina en tuexperto.com - Hace 2 días
Más de un millón de cuentas de usuarios de la web de porno Naughty America se han puesto a la venta en la dark web. Y también se han filtrado cuentas de usuarios de otras web porno: suman 3,8 millones Leer noticia completa en Venden los datos privados de más de un millón de usuarios de una web porno

Dr. Strange: todo lo que necesitas saber sobre el hechicero supremo del universo Marvel

Carlos Zahumenszky en Gizmodo en Español - Hace 2 días
Probablemente ya hayas visto el primer tráiler de Dr. Strange y te hayas quedado con cara de circunstancias. No te preocupes. Si no estás familiarizado con el personaje al que da vida Benedict Cumberbatch en la nueva película del Universo Marvel, aquí te contamos todo lo que necesitas saber para empezar. Read more...

Shorter times to blood transfusion associated with decreased death risk in trauma patients

Patients who get blood quickly after severe injuries are less likely to die, according to researchers. In this study, researchers tracked trauma patients taken from the scene of their injury to hospital who received at least one unit of blood within 24 hours of arriving at the hospital.

Lower-carb diet slows growth of aggressive brain tumor in mouse models

Researchers have slowed a notoriously aggressive type of brain tumor in mouse models by using a low-carbohydrate diet. Glioblastoma, the most common brain tumor in adults, has no effective long-term treatment and on average, patients live for 12 to 15 months after diagnosis.

Scientists develop recipe for testosterone-producing cells

Researchers have discovered a way to keep adult stem cells that are destined to become testosterone-producing cells multiplying and on track to fulfill their fate, a new study reports.

Radical route for the synthesis of chiral molecules

A new methodology has been developed for the selective formation of chiral molecules. The work combines two strategies which require very mild reaction conditions -- enantioselective iminium ion chemistry and photoredox catalysis -- to set quaternary carbon stereocentres with high enantioselectivity.

Modified flu virus can 'resensitize' resistant pancreatic cancer cells to chemotherapy

A common flu virus could be used to overcome patients' resistance to certain cancer drugs -- and improve how those drugs kill cancer cells, according to new research.

Plants force fungal partners to behave fairly

Plants react intelligently to their environment: if they can choose between more cooperative and less cooperative fungal partners, they supply the latter with fewer nutrients and thus force them to cooperate more. Based on these findings, scientists believe that plants could also be used to test market and behavioral theories.

Using methane rather than flaring it

Chemists have found a new, direct way to convert gaseous methane into liquid methanol. This offers industry the interesting prospect of using the gas, rather than simply burning it off, as is currently the case.

Supernova iron found on the moon

Approximately two million years ago a star exploded in a supernova close to our solar system: Its traces can still be found today in the form of an iron isotope found on the ocean floor. Now scientists have found increased concentrations of this supernova-iron in lunar samples as well. They believe both discoveries to originate from the same stellar explosion.

Self-driving mining truck stable at 90 km/h

A self-driving truck has tested successfully at speeds of up to 90 kilometers-per-hour.

Complex ideas can enter consciousness automatically

New research provides further evidence for 'passive frame theory,' the groundbreaking idea that suggests human consciousness is less in control than previously believed. The study shows that even complex concepts, such as translating a word into pig latin, can enter your consciousness automatically, even when someone tells you to avoid thinking about it. The research provides the first evidence that even a small amount of training can cause unintentional, high-level symbol manipulation.