This beast pictured below might not have been caught in the sea, but it is nonetheless still terrifying.

According to reports, the creator was pulled from the Raritan River in New Jersey river two years ago by a Doug Cutler who snagged it with a bow and arrow. It was only recently that a friend posted the above photo to Reddit, and it's been viewed over a million times since.
Now that North Korea has mobile operator Koryolink running in their country, it gives the rest of world a glimpse on what life there is like. And what better way to capture it all than through Instagram?
Nir Goldshlager discovered a major privacy flaw in Facebook's OAuth - where system developers use to access information everytime you hit the "allow" button. Nir gained access to virtually anyone's entire Facebook account. He explained:
There's no denying that cats rule when it comes to the internet. You can hardly click anywhere without stumbling on a site dedicated to pictures of felines and their famous doppelgängers.

And if you need more examples to figure out this obsession, then check out the list below featuring some of the finest "Cats That Look Like ..." Tumblr pages that you could ever hope to stumble upon:
Here's a heartwarming story to help you cope with the rest of the work week. A woman named Sarah Darling was recently reunited with her lost diamond engagement ring by a homeless man named Billy Ray Harris after she accidentally dumped it along with the rest of the contents of in her coin purse inside his change cup.
Looks like sitting in your pajamas all day while tapping on your laptop at home is just not going to cut it anymore as proper workplace etiquette if you want to work for Yahoo.

According to the head of Human Resources Jackie Reses, CEO Marissa Mayer's decision to get rid of one of the best perks of a job in the tech world was a bid to promote productivity and collaboration between employees. From CNET:
According the All Things D, this site called iPhonedevSdk (do not visit this site; it's malicious), is the one site responsible for hacking Facebook and Apple. It reportedly used a Java vulnerability and used code built into the HTML of the site. According to ATD, this is likely responsible for the hacks of Apple and might even be the common thread behind all those Twitter account hacks. (Alicia Keys, did you visit this site?)
Here's an odd case. A Dutch programmer - Joannes Jozef Everardus van Der Meer is suing Facebook over its 'Like' button. The odd thing: van Der Meer is dead. He passed away in 2004.

van Der Meer was the founder of Surfbook, a social diary type service where people could share things wtih friends and like things with a "like" button.
Oatmeal has turned a potential lawsuit into a philanthropic campaign and has raised more than $120,000 in less than 24 hours. We posted, yesterday, about the public dispute that started almost a year ago when Matthew Inman, Oatmeal's comic artist, publicly complained on his blog about FunnyJunk and other image hosting sites that allow uncredited ad-serving images of his work.
It was about a year ago when comic artist Matthew Inman of The Oatmeal wrote an angry blog post against humor aggregator website FunnyJunk. Matthew had derided the platform for allowing (and ad-serving) uncredited images of his work.
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