I may have stolen your bike (lost.ie)
(Hat tip: Laura Nolan)

Conor McCabe tweetz:
John Mooney’s May 2012 article on Irish state knowledge of
#horseburger and criminality.
Anne Marie O’Connor tweetz:
Here’s a #herbscrabble entry I did in Tesco Wexford today. Something you won’t find in their burgers.
Electronic data held by the Health Service Executive is not adequately secure and could be at risk of theft or misuse, an external audit has found.
The audit which was carried out by external consultants and completed in March 2012, found the organisation’s overall information and communications technology (ICT) security framework was “inadequate”.
It said the absence of an effective security framework across the organisation meant the HSE, its staff and the data held by it “may not be adequately protected from attack, compromise, theft or misuse”.
The finding was one of 14 high-level risks and medium-level weaknesses identified across the HSE’s ICT security framework at a national and regional level by Mazars.
The audit report also found one in every five laptops on the HSE South East’s asset register was unencrypted at the time of the audit. Although all laptops are required to be encrypted under HSE policy, it found 292 of the 1,475 laptops in the region appeared to be unencrypted.
Well that’s good to know.
(Eamonn Farrell/Photocall Ireland)
And we thought he was just waiting for his owner.
Tesco shopping Centre Coolock (Clarehall), Dublin, back in the Summer.
Innocent times
If only wNOMNOMNOM.
FSAI Survey Finds Horse DNA In Some Beef Burger Products (FSAI)
Guidance on Beef Labelling (Food Standards Authority)
Pic by Niall Rooney







Momo, the dog of visual artist Andrew Knapp, waits patiently for you to find him in each of the pictures above.
Granted, it’s not terribly challenging, but – and we can’t fully explain this – you will become slightly happier each time you locate Momo.
Find mo’ Momo here at Knapp’s Instagram page or at the Find Momo Tumblr.
Tourism Ireland reportedly paid the Irish Times nearly €500,000 for the domain name Ireland.com.
Now it’s here. And it’s as green, cloying and The Gathering-laden as you had possibly feared.
But it’ does have a bonus “Disney Ireland” link. With tricolour rollercoasters and shamrock Mickeys?
Nope, just sheep.
And if your’re an Irish person who wants to holiday here you have to go to discoverireland.com. Because Ireland.com is only responsible for marketing the island of Ireland OVERSEAS as a holiday destination.
Bloody foreigners.
Previously: The Complaint That Looks Like Ireland.com