42 posts categorized "Internet Safety"

01/03/2013

Foreign Policy Group Gets Hacker Happy New Year

Blaster-virus

Hackers said a big Happy New Year to the Council on Foreign Relations, using the organization's own website to attack unsuspecting visitors.

The CFR is a non-partisan policy group, known mostly for publishing Foreign Affairs, an influential journal on the subject. The group's website was infected with malware that uses a "watering hole" attack -– waiting for users to visit the site before downloading the malware to their machines. The malware involved allows a hacker to execute code remotely on the target computer.

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Ziv Mador, director of security research at Trustwave, an IT security firm, told Disovery News that it isn't clear yet what the malware does. "We're still working on it," he said. "It's a pretty complex piece of malware."

The malware only works on Internet Explorer 8 or earlier versions. The hackers altered the HTML code on the CFR's website itself and were able to remotely execute a program on any computer that accessesed the site. The malware was hidden in several pieces and stored in areas that the web page needed to go to in order to retrieve stored content such as text and pictures. "The javascript is hidden in a file on the system that is usually used for a completely different purpose," he said.

Malware Secretly Attaches Stolen Data to Photos

Microsoft is reportedly working on a permanent fix, and issued a security advisory on Dec. 29. In the meantime there is an automatic work-around here. The simplest way to protect oneself is to disable Javascript and Flash, according to Microsoft, but sometimes turning those two features on an off for different sites can be inconvenient. Users of Internet Explorer 9 and later aren't vulnerable.

While the particular attack on the CFR website used a previously unknown vulnerability in Internet Explorer, the "watering hole" attack is nothing new: a local government site in Maryland and a bank in Boston were hit by one called VOHO in July, which infected targeted computers with code that sent information such as keystrokes back to a server.

Via Threatpost

Photo: An image of the Blaster virus code. Credit: Wikimedia Commons




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12/26/2012

Were 2012 Cybersecurity Predictions Right?

By Linda Rosencrance, TechNewsDaily Contributor

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At the end of each year, Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab checks their predictions twice to see if cyber activity was more naughty than nice. Credit: igor.stevanovic/Shutterstock.com

December is "prediction season" in the cybersecurity industry. Every major anti-virus software maker and digital-security provider issues its own forecasts of what computer users face in the coming year.

So far this month, the predictions for 2013 look a lot like those for 2012: more Android malware, increased cyberattacks by nation-states and greater activity by "hacktivist" groups such as Anonymous.

However, a few companies go back and check their own predictions at the end of the year to see what they got right -- and wrong. One company that does so is Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab, one of the top five anti-virus companies in the world.

"In 2011, we really saw a number of things rising up: hacktivism; big database breaches; attacks against Androids; attacks against Macs; data espionage became daily business in 2011," said Roel Schouwenberg, senior researcher at Kaspersky's Boston-area office. “When we look at 2012, we saw a further evolution of all these new trends."

Kaspersky made the following predictions for 2012:

  • Hacktivist groups, who attack computer systems for political or social reasons, would continue to increase their activities
  • A higher rate of "advanced persistent threat" attacks, or state-sponsored espionage efforts
  • More incidents of cyberwarfare involving customized, state-sponsored malware
  • Attacks on software and game developers such as Adobe, Microsoft, Oracle and Sony
  • More aggressive actions from law-enforcement agencies against cybercriminals
  • An increasing rate in the growth of threats to the Android mobile platform
  • Successful attacks on Apple's Mac OS X computer platform

Let's examine five of the top security incidents that shaped 2012 and check the accuracy of the Kaspersky researchers in light of those predictions.

1. More Mac OS X Malware

Security experts had anticipated an outbreak of malware targeting Mac OS X for years; 2012 was when it finally happened. The bug that did it, called the Flashback or Flashfake Trojan, first appeared near the end of 2011, but didn't reach its peak rate of infection until March of 2012. Flashback infected more than 700,000 Macs around the world, the largest known Mac OS X infection to date.

"In 2011, we predicted that we would see more Mac malware attacks," said Kaspersky Lab's Costin Raiu and David Emm in a blog posting. "We just never expected it would be this dramatic."

Why did Flashback wreak such havoc? One reason was a well-documented Java vulnerability, which Apple took a long time to patch even after it had been publicly disclosed. The Flashback authors took advantage of Apple's delay to incorporate the Java exploit into their otherwise unremarkable creation.

The second reason was the general lack of awareness among Mac users about security. Proper anti-virus software would have stopped Flashback's attack, yet most Mac users felt they didn't need it.

Flashback wasn't the only successful attack on Mac OS X systems in 2012. There were multiple espionage-related attacks on Macs used by Tibetan dissidents and exiles. Some of the attacks used corrupted files purporting to come straight from the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled leader.

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"The espionage angle may be a bigger factor for Mac right now than regular consumer malware," Schouwenberg said. "For general cybercrime, most criminals go after Windows because that's what they know. That's what's easiest for them."

"But when it comes to these targeted attacks, the attackers go after whichever machines the targets are using. So if the targets are using Macs, they'll go after Macs."

Schouwenberg said in terms of the proportion of available systems infected, Flashback was the most successful malware outbreak of the year.

"When you look at relative market share, the Flashback malware in terms of prevalence was the size of [the infamous Windows worm] Conficker," he said. "This was an absolutely huge event in the Apple world. When you extrapolate [the number of Macs infected] to Windows numbers, that's about 10 million."

2. Cyberweapons: Flame

Cyberwarfare is a term that often gets hyped up, especially when a politician or general is speaking.

In fact, the Stuxnet worm, which crippled an Iranian uranium-enrichment facility in the summer of 2010, was for nearly two years the only known cyberweapon that had destroyed anything. That changed this past spring, when a series of cyberattacks destroyed computer systems at oil facilities in Iran, as well as in the offices of the Iranian oil ministry.

Wiper, the malware thought to be responsible for the attacks, was never found, although certain tell-tale signs indicated it was similar to Stuxnet and its cousin Duqu. During the investigation in May, however, researchers from Kaspersky, the Iranian computer emergency response team MAHER and the CrySyS Lab at Budapest University in Hungary discovered something else -- possibly the most sophisticated piece of malware ever seen. Kaspersky's team called it "Flame."

The size, age and sophistication of Flame were startling. It was 20 megabytes in size, as large as a complex smartphone game, while most malware is only a few dozen kilobytes in size. Flame contained a dozen different modules that could be added and subtracted according to the task at hand, which made it extremely versatile as spyware.

It could map out networks, index files, record audio and video, log keystrokes, take screenshots and archive emails and instant messages. When its job was done, it would destroy all signs of itself on any 32-bit Windows PC, and sometimes the host system as well.

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Yet despite its size, Flame was at least five years old at the time of its discovery -- an enormous amount of time for a piece of malware to be "in the wild."

As Raiu said in a press release, Flame was "an example of a complex malicious program that could exist undetected for an extended amount of time while collecting massive amounts of data and sensitive information from its victims."

A couple of weeks after its discovery, Dutch researchers found that Flame's creators had pulled off a mathematical breakthrough.

Using unknown techniques, Flame's creators had created a nearly-impossible cryptologic collisionthat allowed Flame to present itself as a signed, genuine Windows update package direct from Microsoft. No anti-virus software could have stopped it.

Gauss

In August, Kaspersky researchers found a highly sophisticated Trojan in the Middle East, this time spying on Lebanese banks.

Like ordinary criminal banking Trojans, this new malware, which Kaspersky researchers dubbed "Gauss," stole online-banking credentials to break into accounts. Yet Gauss didn't steal any money -- just information.

In their year-end review, Raiu and Emmer said Gauss added a "new dimension to nation-state cyber-campaigns," even if it was nowhere as sophisticated as Flame.

"It appears there is a strong cyber component to the existing geopolitical tensions -- perhaps bigger than anyone expected," they added.

Shamoon

That would prove to be an understatement. Later in August, Shamoon, a piece of especially destructive, yet simple, malware, made its world debut.

Named after a piece of text embedded deep in its code, Shamoon launched an attack against the state-owned Saudi Arabian oil company Saudi Aramco and destroyed data on more than 30,000 computers.  

Shamoon was crude but effective. It searched an infected system for certain files, sent a list of those files to a remote server, and then methodically deleted key parts of the installed Windows system, rendering the infected machine useless.

"You have the hacktivist movement claiming credit for that attack, which may or may not be the case," Schouwenberg said.

"Shamoon wasn't really that sophisticated, but when you look at the relevance of the incidence, it's extremely, extremely important," Schouwenberg added, "especially when you consider the fact that Saudi Aramco announced just recently that they strongly believe that Shamoon's real target was to mess with the oil production rather than just sabotaging the machines in the corporate network."

Kaspersky researchers said many details about Shamoon were still unknown, such as how the malware infected Saudi Aramco's systems in the first place, or who was behind the malware.

Some observers suspect Iran created and used Shamoon as an attempt to cripple Saudi Arabia's oil production, which would cause oil prices to rise, benefiting cash-strapped Iran.

3. Exponential Growth in Android Malware

During 2011, there was an explosion in the number of malicious threats against the Android platform. It was obvious that the trend would go on.

Kaspersky, as well as most of its competitors, accurately predicted that the number of threats for Android would continue to grow at an alarming rate in 2012.

"We predicted we would see an explosion in Android malware and that's what we saw," Schouwenberg said. "There is a huge amount of Android malware these days, although not anywhere near the amount of Windows malware that we see. But it's grown very dramatically."

How dramatically?

"The number of samples we received continued to grow and peaked in June 2012, when we identified almost 7,000 malicious Android programs," Raiu and Emmer wrote. "Overall, in 2012, we identified more than 35,000 malicious Android programs, which is about six times more than in 2011."

So why is there so much Android malware, and so little malware targeting its competition, Apple's iOS?

It's because iOS is locked down tight. Apple oversees every part of the hardware and software development, and strictly controls which apps can be installed on iOS devices.

Android, however, is a free-for-all. Dozens of manufacturers make hundreds of Android devices, and the operating system is a little different on each one. Manufacturers and cellular carriers refuse to update Android in a timely manner, resulting in security holes that are left unpatched for months or years.

"Off-road" app markets flourish, especially in China where access to the official Google Play store is restricted. Google has belatedly tightened security in both Android itself and in the Google Play store, yet its efforts have a long way to go before they can match Apple's.

Still, the tighter security in the latest versions of Android may be having an effect. Kaspersky's own figures show that while the number of new Android threats continued to grow in the second half of 2012, the rate of growth began to slow.

4. Advanced Persistent Threats Go Quiet

Advanced persistent threat hackers, i.e. cyberspies, were certainly active in 2012, yet didn't have the spectacular successes they'd had in previous years. Perhaps the most visible attack on Western targets was the discovery in September 2012 that two pieces of malware had been signed using a valid Adobe code-signing certificate. Apparently, someone, somehow, had broken into an Adobe server and stolen authentication certificates.

"This discovery belongs to the same chain of extremely targeted attacks performed by sophisticated threat actors commonly described as APT," wrote Raiu and Emmer. "The fact that a high profile company like Adobe was compromised in this way redefines the boundaries and possibilities that are becoming available for these high-level attackers."

5. Data Breach After Data Breach

One thing that Kaspersky failed to anticipate in 2012 was the seemingly unending parade of huge data breaches involving companies and organizations with inadequate security. In early June, the business-networking website LinkedIn had 6.4 million passwords stolen. The passwords were encrypted, but in a very simple way that meant most could easily be deciphered.

A day later, online-dating service eHarmony suffered a similar breach, losing 1.5 million passwords, also poorly encrypted.

In July, struggling Web giant Yahoo was embarrassed by a data breach that revealed 450,000 passwordshad been stored without any encryption at all. It wasn't entirely Yahoo's fault, since the database was acquired with the 2010 purchase of another company, but it was also evident that no one had bothered to check.

Worst of all was the revelation in late October that vital personally identifiable information on 3.8 million adult residents of South Carolina, plus 1.9 million dependents and 700,000 businesses, had been stolen from the state tax agency.

Entire tax records, containing names, addresses, dates of birth and, worst of all, Social Security numbers, were all stored unencrypted. Virtually the entire state population of 4.7 million people was put at grave risk of identity theft.

Weeks after the breach was revealed, the state government was blaming the federal IRS for not providing strong security guidelines, and was itself being criticized by security experts for not revealing enough about what had happened.

Looking Back, and Forward

"There isn't too much that was shocking news over 2012, just these up-and-coming things [from] 2011 that really established themselves in 2012," Schouwenberg said. "But we also saw some examples of new nation-state [campaigns] like Flame and Gauss. But from my personal point of view, the most significant event of the year was Shamoon."

As for 2013, "we expect the next year to be packed with high-profile attacks on consumers, businesses and governments alike, and to see the first signs of notable attacks against the critical industrial infrastructure," Raiu said in a company press release. "The most notable trends of 2013 will be new examples of cyberwarfare operations, increasing targeted attacks on businesses and new, sophisticated mobile threats." 


Copyright 2012 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Credit: Images.com/Corbis

12/01/2012

How Syria Shut Down the Internet

By Ben Weitzenkorn, TechNewsDaily

Syria-internet
The Syrian goverment has cut off the Internet in a novel way.
On Thursday, all Internet traffic in and out of Syria suddenly stopped.

Syria isn't the first country to have suddenly cut its population off from the Internet, but the manner in which it did so may be unprecedented.

"Since the beginning of today's outage, we have received no requests from Syrian IP space," network-reliability provider CloudFlare wrote on its blog last night. "That is a more complete blackout than we've seen when other countries have been cut from the Internet."

Video Service Streams Live Reports From Syria"

The Syrian Minister of Information blamed the outage on terrorists, the Jerusalem Post reported.

"It is not true that the state cut the Internet. The terrorists targeted the Internet lines, resulting in some regions being cut off," he reportedly said, citing a cut cable.

As far as CloudFlare could tell, that was not the case. Instead, evidence suggests it was a planned shutdown by the government.

CloudFlare said when the outage occurred, connections to Syrian IP space were all withdrawn at the same time, effectively blocking all Internet traffic to and from the country.

Internet access in Syria is provided solely by the government-run Syrian Telecommunications Establishment.

There are four telecommunication cables that connect Syria to the Internet. Three are underwater and the fourth runs overland through Turkey.

However, CloudFlare doubts that the disconnect was performed physically.

"The systematic way in which routes were withdrawn suggests that this was done through updates in router configurations, not through a physical failure or cable cut," the CloudFlare blog said.

CloudFlare provided a video of the shutoff occurring in real time, letting viewers watch an entire country lose Internet access.

Nationwide Internet cutoffs were among the last-ditch efforts by Libya's and Egypt's former dictators to save their regimes before both fell during the Arab Spring uprisings last year.

More from TechNewsDaily.com

 

Copyright 2012 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

11/20/2012

Bill Gives Feds Warrantless Email Surveillance

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A Senate proposal originally drafted to protect American's email privacy has taken a dramatic detour. In fact, it's turning around and heading in the opposite direction.

The original bill, backed by Democratic chairman of the Senate Judiciary committee Patrick Leahy, required that government agencies obtain search warrants before accessing email accounts. According to CNET's Declan McCullagh, a new version of the bill does away with all the middle men and actually gives government agencies warrantless access to Americans' email accounts. The bill is up for vote next Thursday (November 29.)

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Leahy's revision would give more than 22  government agencies access to email, Google Docs files, Facebook posts, even Twitter direct messages, without probable cause. In some scenarios, the bill also gives the FBI and Homeland Security full access to Internet accounts without the approval of the owner or a judge.

Law enforcement groups, such as the National District Attorney's Association, and Justice Department officials objected to Leahy's original bill. Detractors worried that requiring a warrant to access email accounts could impede criminal investigations.

Citing ongoing legislature discussions, an aide to the Senate Judiciary committee declined CNET a comment on the matter. In light of former CIA director David Petraeus' email scandal, Marc Rotenberg, head of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, did tell CNET that "even the Department of Justice should concede that there's a need for more judicial oversight," not less.

Agencies granted this warrantless surveillance power include any executive department, military department, government corporation, government-controlled corporation or other establishment in the executive branch of the government. Also included is a long list of independent regulatory agencies, such as the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Federal Communications Commission, just to name a few.

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Such a hodgepodge list has rankled Markham Erickson, a lawyer in Washington D.C. who has kept a close eye on the legislation. Speaking not for his corporate clients, Erickson aired his concerns to CNET:

There is no good legal reason why federal regulatory agencies such as the [National Labor Relations Board], [Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission], [Securities and Exchange Commission] or FTC need to access customer information service providers with a mere subpoena. If those agencies feel they do not have the tools to do their jobs adequately, they should work with the appropriate authorizing committees to explore solutions. The Senate Judiciary committee is really not in a position to adequately make those determinations.

In many cases, police will still be required to obtain search warrants -- except when an "emergency" situation is declared -- but the new bill is in stark contrast to the original draft. Tech companies are likely to furrow their brow over these new proposals. What about you?

via CNET

Credit: Images.com/Corbis

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11/15/2012

Government Surveillance On Citizens Rising

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As the inferno of the David Petraeus scandal continues to burn, the latest Google Transparency Report shows government surveillance is starting to heat up.

"This is the sixth time we’ve released this data, and one trend has become clear: Government surveillance is on the rise," Dorothy Chou, Senior Policy Analyst, explains on Google's blog.

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Between January and June of this year governments from around the world filed 20,939 requests with Google to access data on 34,614 accounts. According to company data, during that same time frame last year, governments made 15,744 requests on 25,342 accounts.

The majority of government requests filed in the first six months of 2012 were made by the United States, followed by India, Brazil and France.

The United States made 7,969 requests to Google to access information on 16,281 accounts, one of which the personal Gmail account Paula Broadwell used to communicate with Petraeus during their affair. Google said it fully or partially complied in 90 percent of those cases. Comparatively, during the first half of 2011, Google fielded 5,950 requests on 11,057 accounts.

Google also reported a rise in government requests asking that content or material be removed due to security risks or defamation.

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"The number of government requests to remove content from our services was largely flat from 2009 to 2011. But it’s spiked in this reporting period," Chou explains. "In the first half of 2012, there were 1,791 requests from government officials around the world to remove 17,746 pieces of content." In the same period last year, only 949 requests were made.

Check out the Transparency Report itself, which has been translated into 40 different languages, to see country-by-country trends. However, according to Chou, "in aggregate around the world, the numbers continue to go up."

via the New York Times

Credit Tetra Images/Corbis


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11/12/2012

DuckDuckGo Making Waves In Search Engine Pond

Picture 1

If Google's "streamlined" search engine tactics -- hawking your search results to marketers and tracking your search habits -- has you crying foul, perhaps a new fowl is in order. DuckDuckGo is a bird of a different feather and, as a recent Washington Post profile suggests, it's starting to spread its wings.

Created by Gabriel Weinberg, the website is an ad-free search engine that doesn't track users' interests to generate search results. It also doesn't monopolize search results to elbow out competitors' content, as Google has been accused of doing.

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"My thesis for the company was, what can we do that other search engines, because they're big, can't do easily?" Weinberg told the Post. "Because what's good for Google business is bad for Google users."

Though it's still considered small potatoes next search engine Goliaths like Google and Bing, in one year, DuckDuckGo searches have increased 350 percent, up from 10 million in October 2011 to 45 million last month. That kind of ascent has even attracted financial backing and support from Union Square Ventures, the venture capital firm behind Twitter.

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To be fair, Google processes billions of searches each day, so it's unlikely DuckDuckGo will dethrone the world's most popular search engine anytime soon. However, Brad Burnham, managing partner of Union Square says a little healthy competition isn't such a bad thing.

"We think it's the right time and the right platform to take a crack at this market," he told the Post. "At what point does the breadth of Google's ambitions begin to diminish its focus on its core asset and open up an opportunity for a competitor? There will be an evolution in the marketplace that opens an opportunity for others. I'm not ready to cede to Google the dominant position in search until the end of time."

via the Washington Post

Credit: DuckDuckGo




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10/25/2012

Stop Mooching My Wi-Fi

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I confess, I am a Wi-Fi moocher, albeit of the polite and pay-you-back variety. Yes, I appropriate my neighbors network, but I have their permission and their password...as long as I chip in a few bucks every month towards their bill.

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So far, their Wi-Fi network name is just, well, their last name. A simple, run-of-the-mill name -- certainly not one to turn any heads. However, as the BBC, (compliments of Reddit) pointed out, more people are putting their creativity to use and coming up with broadband names that are sure to make their neighbors do a few double takes, if not spit takes.

Here's a few examples: 

Anti-Theft: "Go Away Don't Steal My Broadband ," "Stop Mooching Our Internet," "Covet not thy neighbor's wi-fi," "Thou shall not steal!"

Not-so-polite suggestions: "StopHavingSoMuchSex," "Stop slamming the door!!!," "Stop wearing heals!," "Stop running," "Your Music in annoying!," "Shut The Barking Dog Up No 7"

Friendly Neighbors: "Free Wifi For Neighbors," "Hola Neighborinos," "I like my neighbors"

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I think you get the picture. So have you come across any unique Wi-Fi names -- either of your own creation or from neighbors -- that you'd like to share? Leave 'em in the comments below.

via BBC

Credit: Corbis Images


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10/10/2012

Internet Pirates: Your Days Are Numbered

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Lend me thine ears ye scurvy pirates pillaging the World Wide Web, a vigilant armada will soon be on thy trail. By year's end, the nation's major Internet service providers will launch a six-strikes-an-you're-out initiative that may put a damper on your plundering days of wide-spread downloading.

The "Copyright Alert System" strategy (CAS), backed by the Obama administration, Hollywood and major record labels, aims to disrupt and potentially terminate Internet access for those who continually infringe upon copyright laws.

The program, which monitors peer-to-peer file-sharing services, includes participation by AT&T, Cablevision Systems, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon.

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First offenders will receive an email alert from their Internet service provider saying their account may have been misused for online piracy. After a second offense, the alert could contain an educational message about online copyright laws.

After the third and fourth strikes, users could receive a pop-up notice "asking the subscriber to acknowledge receipt of the alert."

After four alerts, the warnings stop and the real punishments come to the surface...kind of.

The CAS program calls these "mitigation measures," which could include "temporary reductions of Internet speeds, redirection to a landing page until the subscriber contacts the ISP to discuss the matter or reviews and responds to some educational information about copyright, or other measures (as specified in published policies) that the ISP may deem necessary to help resolve the matter."

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Gigi Sohn, president of digital rights group Public Knowledge, and an adviser to the Center for Copyright Information, the group behind the program, told Wired that offenders won't be penalized each time an infringement is detected.

"Each strike is not one infringement," Sohn said. "Each strike is dozens or scores or hundreds of infringements."

Considering that, after the first infringement is detected, strikes will only be counted every seven days and that there's a grace period between each alert, this dragnet sounds like it has some pretty big holes for occasional pirates to easily slip through.

Forgive my skepticism, but '600-strikes and you're out' seems like a long leash, not to mention a very passive-aggressive way to project authority.

via Wired

Credit: Images.com/Corbis

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09/21/2012

Anti-Islam Video Will Remain On YouTube


Cindy-lee-garcia-622

Yesterday a judge in California ruled against actress Cindy Lee Garcia's plea that YouTube take down footage from "Innocence of Muslims," the preposterously amateurish, nearly unwatchable hack-job of a film responsible for sparking a firestorm of violence and anti-U.S. protests in the Middle East.

Garcia, who starred in the film, requested that a Los Angeles County judge remove the film because she's received death threats, been fired from her job and been barred from seeing her grandchildren. Garcia said that she was hoodwinked into starring in the "hateful anti-Islamic production" and was originally under the impression she was starring in an adventure film about ancient Egyptians.

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Superior Court Judge Luis Lanvin ruled in favor of Google, owners of YouTube, who argued that movies are fictional, thus not entitling personal privacy to role-playing actors.

"[Were] Arnold Schwarzenegger's statements as a cyborg [in the movie 'Terminator'] factual statements about Arnold Schwarzenegger? Well, that's not correct," lawyer Timothy Alger told the court, according to NY Daily News.

"Our laws encourage free speech, especially with matters of public concern. We don't allow people with private interests to trump that," he said. "No matter how we view the content, whether it's reprehensible or mocking, the fact is, it's a subject of wide debate on a topic of interest for people around the world."

According to the Los Angeles Times, Garcia's lawyer, Chris Armenta, argued that this case is "not a First Amendment issue. This is an invasion of privacy issue." Armenta has vowed to push forward until the video is removed.

The film's schlocky 14-minute YouTube trailer -- full of fake beards, atrocious acting not worthy of civic theater and special effects on par with those of a high school AV class -- sparked a wave of violent protest across Libya, Egypt, Tunisia and later spread to two dozen countries around the world.

The U.S. backlash that erupted possibly led to to the killing of U.S. ambassador J. Christopher Stevens along with approximately two dozen others in the last week. The death toll continues to rise. Today the New York Times reported that Pakistan's leading television station reported as many as 19 people were killed in cities across the country on Friday in a day of state-sanctioned protests.

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The White House asked YouTube and Google to review the film's footage to make sure it fell within the company's terms of service.

Google responded, saying the video "is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube." However, the video has been blocked in Egypt, Libya, Indonesia, Malaysia and Saudi Arabia.

via Wired

Credit: YouTube screen grab




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09/10/2012

Update: FBI Not Source for Stolen Apple IDs

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Updated Sept. 10, 2012: According to NBC News, the leaked UDIDs were not from an FBI agent's laptop as previous reported. Instead, they came from the app-publishing company BlueToad. An outside researcher discovered this after looking into AntiSec's claim that it had hacked its way into an FBI laptop and stole 12 million Apple user's UDIDs. BlueToad CEO Paul DeHart told NBC News that after his company was alerted, representatives were able to confirm that they were the sources of the UDIDs. He added that they are taking appropriate legal actions.

It's typical for app developers to have access to users UDIDs. However as Apple spokesperson Trudy Miller pointed out that this information generally does not contain personal information about the user. BlueToad no longer collects UDIDs for app development.

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Reported Sept 4, 2012: Today, the hacker group AntiSec claimed it has obtained over 12 million Unique Device Identifiers, or UDIDs as well other personal information from Apple device owners. These IDs are made up of 40 characters and serve almost like a social security number. Recently, Apple made headlines for rejecting apps that access UDIDs over privacy concerns. 

Just to prove they aren't blowing smoke, the group released 1,000,001 of those UDIDs on Pastebin. They also included specifics on how they hacked the IDs from the FBI. The group claims they breached an agent's computer and accessed some files through a security vulnerability on Java. According the post, the file contained, "...a list of 12,367,232 Apple iOS devices including Unique Device Identifiers, user names, name of device, type of device, Apple Push Notification Service tokens, zip desk cellphone numbers, addresses, etc." 

The group is also claiming people's names addresses and telephone numbers are in their possession, although they haven't released any yet. It doesn't seem like AntiSec is out to hurt the public with the information they nabbed. According to a quote from their site, they want people to know that the FBI is "using your device details and info." Adding, "FBI will, as usual, deny or ignore this uncomfortable thingie and everybody will forget the whole thing at amazing speed." 

To see if your info was leaked during this "uncomfortable thingie" check out this site.

via Mashable

Credit: James Leynse/Corbis




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