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Security

Submission + - German Fraud Forum Carders.cc Exposed (krebsonsecurity.com)

krebsonsecurity writes: Carders.cc, a German online forum dedicated to helping criminals trade and sell financial data stolen through hacking, has itself been hacked, writes Krebsonsecurity.com. From the story: "The once-guarded contents of its servers are now being traded on public file-sharing networks, leading to the exposure of potentially identifying information on the forum’s users as well as countless passwords and credit card accounts swiped from unsuspecting victims." The data posted onto Rapidshare includes the e-mail and IP address of each user, in addition to what appears to be all of the public and private communications among forum users.

Submission + - Does an Associates Matter Anymore?

n2kzo1 writes: Dear Slashdotters; Does an “associates” degree matter anymore? Specifically does it matter in my situation; I work in the tech industry, but I didn’t get my college degree back in my 20’s. Last year (and almost a year before that) I started going to an adult-oriented online college. (My employer has been reimbursing my class costs, as I finish each class.) However, the online college put me onto a bachelors track and told me I didn’t need an associates. (By the way I’ve been in the tech industry for about 15 years, and have several tech-certs.) I’ve taken about 6 months off from the online college to pursue another (more demanding) technical certification. Soon I will be returning to online college classes. I’ve only completed about 30% of my bachelors. I was thinking of asking the online college to switch me to an associates track, and I’m guessing I would only need a few more classes to finish that, and then I could go back to my bachelors track later. But, in my situation, does the “associates” degree even matter? Or should I just continue getting my bachelors and forget about the associates? Eventually I would like to someday complete a masters degree. I’m in the US, and the bachelors would be a Bachelors of Science in Business Administration. p.s. – There may be several hours in-between my responses (here), because this site is blocked at my job.
Robotics

Submission + - Tony Robbins, Sergey Brin Become Robots (singularityhub.com)

kkleiner writes: If you are like me, you have been somewhat skeptical of the whole telepresence robot idea. Yet after seeing Sergey Brin and Tony Robbins attend a recent Xprize event via Willow Garage's Texai telepresence robot, consider me convinced that the telepresence robot revolution is indeed for real. In the future, individuals will probably be able to rent out time on telepresence robots at events all over the world.

Submission + - Obama sends nuclear experts to tackle BP oil spill (telegraph.co.uk) 1

An anonymous reader writes: The US has sent a team of nuclear physicists to help BP plug the "catastrophic" flow of oil into the Gulf of Mexico from its leaking Deepwater Horizon well, as the Obama administration becomes frustrated with the oil giant's inability to control the situation. The five-man team – which includes a man who helped develop the first hydrogen bomb in the 1950s – is the brainchild of Steven Chu, President Obama's Energy Secretary.
Idle

Submission + - US Postman Hoarded Over 20,000 Letters (bbc.co.uk)

calmofthestorm writes: Some 20,000 pieces of mail — many more than a decade old — have been recovered from a postman's garage in the US city of Philadelphia. The FBI said it took more than three postal vans to remove the mail. Investigators are still trying to find the postman so they can question him.

Submission + - Google to offer encrypted searches next week (cnet.com)

John Jorsett writes: CNet reports that, embarrassed by the revelation that its Street View program had improperly collected usage data from WiFi hot spots, Google attempted to repair its image by announcing Friday that it would begin offering an encrypted version of its search service next week.
Security

Submission + - Phish Targets Seize on Teachable Moments (krebsonsecurity.com)

krebsonsecurity writes: An increasing number of phished brands are not only disabling the fraudulent sites, but also seizing on the opportunity to teach would-be victims how to spot future scams, writes Krebsonsecurity.com. From the story: "From Sept. 2008 to April 2010, Hong tracked 1.16 million hits from roughly 15,000 unique redirected URLs. To filter out probable victims from other “noise” traffic — such as random Web crawlers and people testing the landing pages — researchers at Carnegie Mellon University scrubbed the data of hits that didn’t identify the original phishing site, as well as those that appeared to be for testing only (Internet addresses that hit multiple phishing URLs per day, for example). After filtering the results, Hong said his team found roughly 200,000 hits on 1,285 URLs — or about 156 hits per URL — that were very likely clicks from people who would have given away financial data and/or passwords at phishing."
Security

Submission + - Experts Chart Massive Drop in Number of Zeus C& (krebsonsecurity.com)

krebsonsecurity writes: Security experts are tracking a massive drop in the global number of control servers for various ZeuS botnets that are online, suggesting that a coordinated takedown effort was executed by law enforcement and/or volunteers from the security research community acting in tandem, reports krebsonsecurity.com. The incident may have affected an estimated 1.7 million ZeuS infected systems, and appears to be related to the disconnection of an ISP or hosting provider in Kazakhstan that served a satellite of hosting providers that had a history of attracting ZeuS command and control servers.

Submission + - Cybercrooks Surpassed Old School Bankrobbers in 09 (krebsonsecurity.com)

krebsonsecurity writes: Organized cyber criminal gangs stole $25 million in the 3rd quarter alone last year, by pilfering the online bank accounts of small to midsized businesses, the FDIC reported last week. In contrast, traditional bank robbers hauled just $9.4 million in 1,184 bank robberies during that same period, according to an analysis of FBI bank crime statistics by krebsonsecurity.com. From that story: "The federal government sure publishes a lot more information about physical bank robberies that it makes available about online stick-ups. Indeed, the FBI’s bank crime stats are extraordinarily detailed. For example, they can tell you that in the 3rd quarter of last year, bank robbers were more likely to hold up their local branch between the hours of 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. on a Wednesday than at any other time or day of the week; they can tell you the number of tear gas and dye packs taken with the loot, the number of security cameras activated, the number of food stamps taken, even what percentage of suspected perpetrators had illegal drug habits at the time of the robberies. About the only thing the stats don’t tell you is what brand of jeans the perpetrators were wearing and whether the getaway car had cool vanity plates. What do we get about e-crime statistics from the federal government? One guy from the FDIC giving a speech at the RSA conference.
Iphone

Submission + - All Your Apps Are Belong to Apple (eff.org)

ChiefMonkeyGrinder writes: Electronic Frontier Foundation on the iPhone Developer Program License Agreement. The entire family of devices built on the iPhone OS (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad) have been designed to run only software that is approved by Apple, a major shift from the norms of the personal computer market.
The Internet

Submission + - Dot-com craze peaked 10 years ago this week (networkworld.com)

netbuzz writes: When the NASDAQ stock index hit its all-time high of 5,133 on March 10, 2000, it had more than doubled in a year and the dot-com bubble was already leaking in a big way. A week later the NASDAQ had fallen 9 percent. A year later all of those NASDAQ gains were gone and then some, as well as such poster children of the era as Pets.com, Kozmo and – who could forget? – Whoopi’s Flooz. Here’s a look back.
Security

Submission + - Mariposa Botnet Authors Unlikely to See Jail Time (krebsonsecurity.com)

krebsonsecurity writes: Three Spanish men were arrested last month for allegedly building an international network of more than 12 million hacked PCs that were used for everything from identity theft to spamming. But according to Spanish authorities and security experts who helped unravel the crime ring, the accused may very well never see the inside of a jail cell even if they are ultimately found guilty, due to insufficient cyber crime legislation in Spain, writes krebsonsecurity.com. From the article: “It is almost impossible to be sent to prison for these kinds of crimes in Spain, where prison is mainly for serious crime cases,” said Captain Cesar Lorenzana, deputy head technology crime division of the Spanish Civil Guard.

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