2013년 5월 8일 수요일

Babalu and War Machine Too

Standing across the cage from Lawal will be none other than Seth Petruzelli. "The Silverback" is a veteran of the Ultimate Fighter reality program and competed four times in the Octagon. However, the former heavyweight is best known as being the man who infamously knocked out Kimbo Slice and for giving a post-fight interview that led to the collapse of Elite XC.Lawal will be competing for the first time since being stunned in the Season 7 tournament by Emanuel Newton. After picking apart Newton in the opening minutes of the fight, King Mo was caught with a spinning back fist that turned off his lights. It marked the second loss of Lawal's professional career.

With the Season 8 tournament switching to a four-man bracket,professional Reversible Hammer Crusher manufacturers we now know that the winner of Lawal vs. Petruzelli will square off against the winner of a battle between Renato "Babalu" Sobral and Jacob Noe, who will compete against one another earlier on the same card.Also announced was a welterweight scrap between the always controversial War Machine and jiu-jitsu practitioner Blas Avena.War Machine was released from the UFC after the The Ultimate Fighter alum made statements about the death of Evan Tanner, in which he claimed that the former champion had committed suicide and that his death was no accident.Bellator 96 is headlined by a battle for the Bellator lightweight championship between undefeated Michael Chandler and challenger Dave Jansen, who is fresh off of his Season 7 tournament win.

Federal prosecutors have built a hacking case against a Las Vegas man who raked in half a million dollars exploiting a minor glitch in a video poker machine, Wired reports.At the center of the hacking case is the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, a 1984 law used to prosecute Aaron Swartz that critics say is way too broad.The CFAA --professional Reversible Hammer Crusher manufacturers which was originally passed to protect national security -- punishes people who "exceed authorized access" to computers.A lawyer for John Kane, the Vegas local who's being prosecuted under the law, says that he didn't violate the CFAA even though he did exploit a bug in a machine known as Game King.That lawyer, Andrew Leavitt, told Wired that Kane and a friend of his were playing by the rules imposed by the machine, and that's all that matters.

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