Posts Tagged ‘Blog’

WikiLeaks Website Pulled by Amazon after US Political Pressure

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

wikileaksThe United States struck its first blow against WikiLeaks after Amazon.com pulled the plug on hosting the whistleblowing website in an apparent reaction to heavy political pressure.

The main website and a sub-site devoted to the diplomatic documents were unavailable from the US and Europe on Wednesday, as Amazon servers refused to acknowledge requests for data.

The plug was pulled as the influential senator and chairman of the homeland security committee, Joe Lieberman, called for a boycott of the site by US companies.

“[Amazon's] decision to cut off WikiLeaks now is the right decision and should set the standard for other companies WikiLeaks is using to distribute its illegally seized material,” he said.

“I call on any other company or organisation that is hosting WikiLeaks to immediately terminate its relationship with them.”

The department of homeland security confirmed Amazon’s move, referring journalists to Lieberman’s statement.

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Apple Finally Gets Beatles on Board

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

Yesterday many people were interesting in Apple mystery, which looks like this:

apple-mystery

And today we have an idea that Steve Jobs is nearing the end of his long and winding pursuit of the Beatles catalog.

Apple Inc. is preparing to disclose that its iTunes Store will soon start carrying music by the Beatles, according to people familiar with the situation, a move that would fill a glaring gap in the collection of the world’s largest music retailer.

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Winning Cybercrime Battle

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

cyber-crime-battleVirtual worlds are no longer the backwater playgrounds of a few computer-adept programmers. They are multi-billion dollar worldwide industries spanning the fields of entertainment, communications, information technology, and increasingly law enforcement. In short, there’s money to be made, and with an expansive, loosely-regulated product like virtual worlds comes the potential for cybercrime.

According to the Norton Cybercrime Report, nearly 54 percent of the victims believe they are at fault when a cyber attack happens. Fueling the feeling of powerlessness is the notion that “faceless” criminals are the main perpetrators, as well as beliefs that cyber crooks won’t be brought to justice.

A very similar analogy to the cyberrealm at the turn of this century is the Western frontier in America at the turn of the 18th century. There was an age of brave exploration which was inevitably followed by an age of exploitation and suspension of human ideals. Those who arrived earlier either paved the road for the well-being of their followers or took advantage of those who were not as adapted to the climate or knowledgeable about the customs there. Eventually, industrialization brought the whole country forward. The incentives for committing crimes decreased in amount while the victims themselves generally became capable of defending themselves. It must be pointed out that crime has certainly not been wiped out in the US but it is no longer as fearsome and widespread as it once was.

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Facebook and Bing Team-Up for Social Search

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Can your search get by with a little help from your friends? Bing thinks so. The Microsoft search site now lets users upgrade their queries by drawing on information friends have shared on Facebook.

social_network

One new Bing search option, Liked Results, should spotlight relevant items shared by friends on Facebook. As a post on Bing’s blog explains, a search for restaurants in San Francisco would no longer show just those places that the Web at large deems worthy of interest, but establishments Facebook pals like.

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Firefox Trojan: Remember Your Passwords without Permission

Monday, October 11th, 2010

firefox_trojanSecurity researchers from antivirus vendor Webroot have identified an information stealing trojan, which modifies a Firefox file, so that the browser is forced to store passwords automatically.

The threat is detected by Webroot as Trojan-PWS-Nslogm and is capable of stealing usernames and passwords stored by both Internet Explorer and Firefox browsers.

By default, whenever Firefox detects that login credentials are submitted through a Web form, it offers to remember them for future use.

When this happens, the user is presented with several options which include “Remember”, “Never for This Site” or “Not Now”. If they choose remember, the browser stores the username and password in a local database.

Since it’s easier to steal credentials from this database instead of injecting the browser process and grabbing them as they are submitted, the author of this trojan thought it would make more sense to have Firefox remember all passwords without asking users for confirmation.

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