44983721
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
Just over a year ago, phishers tricked a lady into handing over her banking details. They then siphoned off her life savings, amounting to £1 million, and went on a spending spree in the UK January sales, wasting large sums of the money of cheeseburgers, gold and powerful PCs. Eight people have now been convicted for their involvement in the scam and face sentencing in May. It was a global crime, with some suspects based in Egypt and the victim living in South Africa, but an investigation from the leading light of the UK's cyber policing, the Metropolitan Police Service’s Police Central e-Crime Unit (PCeU), was successful in tracking down the crooks.
44983293
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standards body has announced the formation of a study group to explore the possibility of developing a new 400Gbps Ethernet standard, the first step on the way to insanely fast networks of the future. The group will meet for the first time between 14 and 17 May in Victoria, British Columbia in Canada. The IEEE wants to ensure networks can deal with the "burgeoning bandwidth tsunami", said John D’Ambrosia, chief Ethernet evangelist, CTO office at Dell and chair of the new group.
44930267
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
Research from TechWeekEurope has shown how the UK government has lied about fighting the so-called "database state". Back in 2009, the Conservative Party, in the run-up to the election that would see them come to power as part of a Coalition, said they would cut the number of central databases and slim down surveillance. But Freedom of Information requests have shown that not only have database numbers either stayed flat or risen across government departments, abuse of data is rife in certain areas too and some departments run such complex and distributed systems they can't even count how many troves of personal data they have sitting on servers. On top of that, the Tories have essentially rehashed many of the projects of the Labour regime they once derided. From the Communications Data Bill, better known as Snooper's Charter, to a massive database of children's visits to hospitals, the database state looks set to expand, not contract. MPs working in government agree. “It is clear that Conservative ministers have in many cases not learnt from the Labour errors, and, egged on by the Labour party, are pushing for some illiberal policies,” says Julian Huppert, MP for Cambridge.
44926779
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
As the value of Bitcoins hit new highs this week of $142 per coin, the biggest exchange claimed to have been on the wrong end of a "major DDoS attack". Japan-based Mt.Gox said it appeared there were two motivations behind the attacks. First, to destabilise Bitcoin and, second, to abuse the system for profit. "“Attackers wait until the price of Bitcoins reaches a certain value, sell, destabilize the exchange, wait for everybody to panic-sell their Bitcoins, wait for the price to drop to a certain amount, then stop the attack and start buying as much as they can," the company said. Meanwhile, Bitcoin wallet site Instawallet has shut down, with security problems to blame. The company was hit by a breach earlier this week.
44903649
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
Members of the legal team responsible for prosecution of Aaron Swartz have claimed they received threatening letters, emails and some had their social network accounts hacked following the suicide of the Internet freedom activist. Following Swartz's death, his family and friends widely lambasted the prosecution team, who were accused of being heavy-handed in their pursuit of the 26-year-old. He was facing trial for alleged copyright infringement, accused of downloading excessive amounts of material from the academic article resource JSTOR. US attorney for Massachusetts Carmen Ortiz, who headed up the prosecution, and another lead prosecutor Stephen Heymann have reportedly become the target of “harassing and threatening messages” and their personal information, including home address, personal telephone number, and the names of family members and friends, was posted online. Heymann also received a postcard with a picture of his father’s head in a guillotine.
44903505
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
In a bid to make some ground in the mobile browser market, Mozilla and Samsung are working together on a fresh browser engine — ‘Servo’. It is being developed primarily for Android phones built on ARM processors, and is built with the “massively parallel” hardware of the future in mind, according to Mozilla’s CTO Brendan Eich. It's also built on top of the new ‘Rust’ programming language, which has been developed by Mozilla and a growing community of open source enthusiasts.
44855533
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
China has again been named as the suspected perpetrator of a malware campaign, this time against Tibetan activists. Attackers created a malicious version of a real Android communications app, Kakao Talk, which siphoned off plenty of data and revealed details on the victim's whereabouts. To get to the right people, the attackers kicked off a spear phishing campaign, having most likely gained contacts from a hacked email account. They even cloned a legitimate message with an Android APK to trick targets. Citizen Lab, the group of researchers who looked into the malware, said it was deeply concerning.
44854563
submission
twoheadedboy writes:
Google is in hot water over privacy again. This time it is facing the wrath of no less than six regulators in Europe, after it failed to do enough to stop CNIL, the French privacy watchdog, ordering Europe-wide investigations. France, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain will all look into Google's policy changes of 2012. Those amendments caused a furore amongst privacy advocates, largely because, by lumping all of its different services' privacy policies into one document, it effectively said it could transfer data across different divisions without asking users' permission. EU commissioner Viviane Reding said they broke EU law. Meanwhile, Google's privacy director Alma Whitten departed yesterday, but it's unclear whether the exit is related to the saga. Google itself said in February that CNIL was in fact the one not responding to questions adequately...