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Mark Ward | 14:01 UK time, Monday, 20 September 2010

Lady Gaga

Μύ

On Tech Brief today: Mixing pop and politics, and how money can make your computer chip run faster.

• Singing, dancing, wearing meat: Lady Gaga generates debate no matter what she does. Of late she has been actively encouraging discussion by exhorting her 6.3 million followers on Twitter to lobby the US Senate over its "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy which bans gay soldiers from being open about their sexuality. if this will change politics:

"It seems to me that the 6.3 'lil monsters' are unlikely to act much as a mob, either a smart or dumb one. They are... receiving a request from the person at the top about whom they are gaga. She hopes they will individually call their representatives in Washington."

• If you think your computer is running a bit slow, Intel might be able to help. The chip giant is selling upgrade cards for some of its processors that, on payment of $50, will unlock some of the hidden power of that machine. this move is unique:

"Chip manufacturers routinely handicap processors to differentiate between different products. Sometimes imperfections in the manufacturing process are exploited to, say, offer a cheaper processor with only three functional cores instead of the normal four. At other times, processor speeds are artificially capped using BIOS settings, for example. However, this is the first time a company has charged consumers to unlock the full potential of their processor."

• Not everyone is happy with Intel's decision. about the idea of a company charging you to do more than the basics with their wares:

"This idea, which Siva Vaidhyanathan calls 'If value, then right,' sounds reasonable on its face. But it's a principle that flies in the face of the entire human history of innovation. By this reasoning, the company that makes big tins of juice should be able to charge you extra for the right to use the empty cans to store lugnuts; the company that makes your living room TV should be able to charge more when you retire it to the cottage; the company that makes your coat-hanger should be able to charge more when you unbend it to fish something out from under the dryer."

• Cyber-criminals can be a confident bunch. Especially those who set up fake Facebook accounts in the name of Ronald K Noble - one of Interpol's police chiefs. that impersonators used the accounts to get intelligence about who was being targeted by :

"Although Facebook itself wasn't compromised in any way, the example cited by the Interpol head hinges on the ease with which the criminals were able to forge his identity without challenge. This is a problem both Facebook, and that other giant of social media, Twitter, have been grappling with."

• The five billionth picture was posted on photo-sharing site Flickr over the weekend. It was taken by Aaron Yeo. at how Flickr is matching up to Facebook.

"Despite the fact that social networks like Facebook have become popular places to share photos, it seems that the growth of Flickr continues at the same pace as during the last 3 years, adding about one billion photos per year. (Facebook claims that users uploaded 2.5 billion photos per month, in February 2010.)"

If you want to suggest links or stories for Tech Brief, you can send them to on Twitter, tag them bbctechbrief on or e-mail them to techbrief@bbc.co.uk.

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