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Android

Submission + - Android Hackers Honing Skills in Russia (csoonline.com)

MikeatWired writes: "The malware business growing around Google Android — now the leading smartphone operating system — is still in its infancy. Today, many of the apps built to steal money from Android users originate from Russia and China, so criminal gangs there have become cyber-trailblazers. Sophos and Symantec on Wednesday released their latest Android malware discoveries written in Russian. While the language narrows the number of potential victims, the social-engineering tactics used to get Android users to install the malware is universal. The gang tracked by Sophos is using fake antivirus scanners, while Symantec is tracking cybercriminals using mobile websites to offer bogus versions of popular games. Sophos says the criminals are like other entrepreneurs launching startups. They're starting in Russia, but have far greater ambitions. 'I don't think we can say that they're necessarily using it as a testing ground — think of it more as a local business that as it grows may gain multinational ambitions,' Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, said in an email interview on Wednesday. The cyber scam tracked by Sophos was reported this week by GFI Lab, which discovered links to the bogus antivirus software on Twitter. Sophos dug deeper and found that the .ru domains pointed to the same Internet protocol address hosted in Ukraine."
Games

Submission + - Top Five Reasons Sonic The Hedgehog Will Never Beat Mario (modojo.com)

buffdaily247 writes: "Playing video games in the 90s meant choosing a side in the vicious war between Sega and Nintendo; that is, unless you were a Neo Geo snob. Not only did this extend to consoles, but also both publishers' mascots, Sega with its speedy Sonic the Hedgehog, and Nintendo with its portly plumber, Mario. Thing is, the winner wasn't so clear cut in those days, especially with each character starring in critically acclaimed adventures. There was no denying the quality of Sonic 1-3, along with the mind-blowing Sonic & Knuckles. Meanwhile, Mario held his own with Super Mario World, Super Mario 64 and Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars. You could literally make a case to why one character was better than the other and come out the victor."
Music

Submission + - BitTorrent piracy boosts music sales, study finds (bgr.com)

zacharye writes: A recent study found that contrary to arguments repeatedly posed by major record labels — and perhaps contrary to logic as well — BitTorrent piracy has a direct correlation to increased album sales. Between May 2010 and January 2011, North Carolina State University assistant professor Robert Hammond tracked BitTorrent download statistics for new albums ahead of their releases. He then compared his data to music sales figures and found what he believes to be a connection...
AI

Submission + - DARPA system to blend AI, machine learning to grasp mountain of text (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) will next this month detail the union of advanced technologies from artificial intelligence, computational linguistics, machine learning, natural-language fields it hopes to bring together to build an automated system that will let analysts and others better grasp meanings from large volumes of text documents."
Security

Submission + - Symantec: More Malware on Religious Sites Than Porn Sites (esecurityplanet.com) 1

kongshem writes: "According to Symantec's annual Internet Security Threat Report, religious and ideological websites have far more security threats per infected site than adult/pornographic sites. Why is that? Symantec's theory: "We hypothesize that this is because pornographic Web site owners already make money from the Internet and, as a result, have a vested interested in keeping their sites malware-free — it's not good for repeat business,""
Privacy

Submission + - Maintain privacy by poisoning the privacy well (openthefuture.com) 1

Boawk writes: Can we protect our privacy by flooding the internet with false information about ourselves?

It’s the last approach that really interests me: Pollution. Poisoning the data stream. Putting out enough false information that the real information becomes unreliable. At that point, anyone wishing to know the truth about me has to come to me directly, allowing me to control access. It’s hardly a perfect option — the untrue things can be permanently connected to you, and it does kind of make you hard to trust online — but it’s the one approach to opacity that’s purely social and extremely difficult to stop.


China

Submission + - VMWare Source Code Leaks From Hacked Chinese Firm (threatpost.com)

chicksdaddy writes: "In what looks like the IT equivalent of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster, purloined data and documents continue to bubble up from the networks of a variety of compromised Chinese firms.

In the latest incident, source code for the U.S. software firm VMWare's ESX product has fallen into the hands of a patriotic hacker known as "Hardcore Charlie," who claims he found it on servers belonging to the China Electronics Import & Export Corporation (CEIEC), a firm with close ties to the Chinese government, in a March hack.

VMWare has acknowledged the leak. In a statement on the VMWare Web site, Ian Mulholland, Director of VMWare's Security Response Center, said the company acknowledged that a source code file for its ESX product had been leaked online. In a phone interview, Mulholland told Threatpost the company was monitoring the situation and conducting an investigation into the incident.

"The fact that the source code may have been publicly shared does not necessarily mean that there is any increased risk to VMware customers," VMware said in a statement."

Privacy

Submission + - FBI compromises another remailer (google.com)

betterunixthanunix writes: "Another remailer has been compromised by the FBI, who made a forensic image of the hard disc of a remailer located in Austria. The remailer operator has reissued the remailer keys, but warns that messages previously sent through the remailer could be decrypted. The operator also warns that law enforcement agents had an opportunity to install a back door, and that a complete rebuild of the system will take some time."
Google

Submission + - Google warns 20K websites they could be infected (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Google has warned 20,000 websites that they might be hacked and injected with JavaScript redirect malware, Google said. In a message sent this week, Google said that some pages of the website may be hacked. "Specifically, we think that JavaScript has been injected into your site by a third party and may be used to redirect users to malicious sites," the Google Search Quality team said. The team said files are infected with unfamiliar JavaScript and warned that site owners should search for files containing "eval(function(p,a,c,k,e,r)" in particular. The code may be placed in HTML, JavaScript or PHP files, Google said.

Submission + - Does Anyone Repair Electronics Any More? (electronicdesign.com) 1

futuristic writes: The comments on this article are an interesting read, covering a wide span of interest and experience in component-level electronics repair. Personally I enjoy harvesting components and assemblies for re-use and am looking forward to refurbishing a 1970's analog synthesizer my son recently acquired.
IBM

Submission + - Cringely predicts IBM will shed 78% of US employees by 2015 (cringely.com)

Third Position writes: Cringely with more predictions about IBM: "The direct impetus for this column is IBM’s internal plan to grow earnings-per-share (EPS) to $20 by 2015. The primary method for accomplishing this feat, according to the plan, will be by reducing US employee head count by 78 percent in that time frame." So far, Cringely's pronouncements about IBM have been approximately true, even if he missed the exact numbers and timeframes. Is he right this time?

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