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  2. File sharing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_sharing

    File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digital media, such as computer programs, multimedia (audio, images and video), documents or electronic books.

  3. AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.

  4. Social media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media

    The PLATO system was launched in 1960 at the University of Illinois and subsequently commercially marketed by Control Data Corporation.It offered early forms of social media features with innovations such as Notes, PLATO's message-forum application; TERM-talk, its instant-messaging feature; Talkomatic, perhaps the first online chat room; News Report, a crowdsourced online newspaper, and blog ...

  5. Phishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phishing

    The term "phishing" is said to have been coined by Khan C. Smith, a well-known spammer and hacker, [51] and its first recorded mention was found in the hacking tool AOHell, which was released in 1994. AOHell allowed hackers to impersonate AOL staff and send instant messages to victims asking them to reveal their passwords.

  6. Peer-to-peer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-to-peer

    Resilio Sync is a directory-syncing app. Research includes projects such as the Chord project, the PAST storage utility, the P-Grid, and the CoopNet content distribution system. Secure Scuttlebutt is a peer-to-peer gossip protocol capable of supporting many different types of applications, primarily social networking.

  7. The New York Times crossword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_York_Times_crossword

    The motivating impulse for the Times to finally run the puzzle (which took over 20 years even though its publisher, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, was a longtime crossword fan) appears to have been the bombing of Pearl Harbor; in a memo dated December 18, 1941, an editor conceded that the puzzle deserved space in the paper, considering what was ...

  8. BitTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent

    By early 2015, AT&T estimated that BitTorrent accounted for 20% of all broadband traffic. [105] Routers that use network address translation (NAT) must maintain tables of source and destination IP addresses and ports. Because BitTorrent frequently contacts 20–30 servers per second, the NAT tables of some consumer-grade routers are rapidly filled.

  9. Google Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Books

    The extraction of text from page images is a difficult engineering task. Smudges on the physical books' pages, fancy fonts, old fonts, torn pages, etc. can all lead to errors in the extracted text. Imperfect OCR is only the first challenge in the ultimate goal of moving from collections of page images to extracted-text based books.