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Posts Tagged ‘cyber’

For Refurbed Apple iPhones, Cyber Monday is No Black Friday

AT Ts refurbished iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS deals arent quite what they were on Black Friday. But theyre still a deal and will arrive quicker than the next-generation iPhone, which new rumors are pointing to the existence of.
– AT amp;Ts refurbished 16GB iPhone 3G for $49.99 was a Black Friday special only, according to AT amp;Ts online sales support. On Cyber Monday, its the 8GB iPhone 3G thats priced at $49 and available in black only.

The carrier is also offering refurbished 32GB iPhone 3G S models, in black or whi…


For Refurbed Apple iPhones, Cyber Monday Is No Black Friday

AT T’s refurbished iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS deals aren’t quite what they were on Black Friday. But they’re still deals, and will arrive sooner than the next-generation iPhone, which new reports are suggesting may be being tested.
– AT amp;T’s refurbished 16GB iPhone 3G for $49.99
was a Black Friday special only, according to AT amp;T’s online sales support.
On Cyber Monday, it’s the 8GB iPhone 3G that’s priced at $49 and available in
black only.

The carrier is also offering refurbished 32GB iPhone 3GS models, in black or…


Online Security Tips for Black Friday, Cyber Monday

Consumers and retailers are entering one of the busiest shopping periods of the year. The holidays bring more than shoppers, however they also bring cyber-criminals. Here are some tips to think about when it comes to your business, or your approach to online shopping, for the season.
– Consumers may have concerns about shopping online during the holidays, but
that is not going to keep many of them away from their computers.
In a survey by Sunbelt Software, 90 percent of the more than 650
respondents said they plan to shop online, despite the fact that many (56
percent) were c…


Tech Prods Obama over Cyber Czar

TechAmerica tells President Obama his promise to appoint a cyber-security coordinator in the White House is growing more urgent by the day. Obama promised to appoint a cyber-security coordinator more than five months ago.
– The tech industry is
growing impatient over President Obama’s failure so
far to appoint a cyber-security coordinator in the White House. It has been
more than five months since Obama
held a much ballyhooed media event on the importance of cyber-security
and pledging to appoint a cyber-security …


Virtual shield

By Mark Cieslak
BBC Click

The risk to government networks and major financial institutions from cyber warfare is increasing every day but what is being done to defend national borders

Globe

Estonia is an online savvy state and champion of so called ‘e-government,’ a paperless system with many government services online. The population can even vote via the web.

In 2007 a large number of Estonian government and financial websites were brought to a standstill as they came under sustained online attack.

On 4 July 2009, US and South Korean government websites and those of certain banks and businesses ground to a halt as they came under denial of service assaults. In the United States, the Pentagon and the White House were also targeted.

These cyber attacks were all initially thought to be orchestrated by countries unfriendly to Estonia, South Korea and the US and to date have been the highest profile examples of so-called cyber warfare.

Digital battlefield

Conventional warfare relies on tanks, troops, artillery, aircraft and a whole gamut of weapons systems. Cyber warfare requires a computer and an internet connection.

Professor Sommer

Rather than sending in the marines, the act of typing a command on a keyboard can have a devastating effect on computer systems and networks.

According to Clive Room of Portcullis Computer Security: "It is possible to bring an entire state to a standstill theoretically and we’ve seen it done on a small scale practically, so the threat ahead of us is very big indeed."

From criminal gangs trying to steal cash, to foreign intelligence services trying to steal secrets, the threat of cyber warfare is now very real.

Nato suspects that along with the tanks and troops involved in the conflict in Georgia in 2008, Russian forces also engaged in cyber attacks against Georgian government computer systems.

Professor Peter Sommer of the London School of Economics explained that cyber warfare should just be seen as a part of modern warfare in general:

"[Carl Von] Clausewitz said war is diplomacy conducted by other means. What cyber warfare gives you is a whole range of new types of technologies which you can apply."

Zombie machines

These international attacks are not isolated instances. Everyday government and corporate websites fend off thousands of attempts to infiltrate hack and cause disruption.

Twitter, Facebook and other high-profile sites have recently been brought to their knees by similar attacks.

The popular weapon of choice in cyber warfare is the directed denial of service attack or DDOS. Unknown to their owners, infected computers become zombie machines digitally press-ganged to do the bidding of hackers, this is known as a botnet.

"My experience of doing investigations of all sizes is that very often the initial diagnosis is wrong"

Professor Sommer, London School of Economics

In their thousands these zombie machines attempt to log on to a particular website, forcing it to fail or collapse under the sheer weight of data it is receiving.

The threat of cyber warfare is being taken seriously by Western governments and Nato. Online assets are being deployed to bolster national and international digital defences.

NATO has set up a cyber defence facility in Estonia codenamed K5. The American government has launched a national cyber security strategy and the UK has responded by creating two organisations, the Office of Cyber Security and the Cyber Security Operations Centre based at GCHQ in Cheltenham.

However the amount of people involved is still small, said Clive Room.

"The government’s own reckoning is about 40. About 20 people within each of those two offices."

In comparison he estimates that there are about 40,000 people "listening in to us in China" and "working round the clock."

For Professor Sommer, the UK has had a response to cyber warfare in place for 10 years, but "it’s been pretty hidden so far."

"You tended to get to know about it if you were an academic or you moved in certain sort of technical circles," he said.

"More recently because the problems got bigger and because of greater public alarm and interest they have decided to make it more public."

Misdiagnosis

If defending against cyber warfare is tough, trying to pin point, track back and identify the origin of an online attack can be a near impossible task.

Computer mouse and keyboard

In the case of the Estonian attacks, initial reports suggested that Russia was to blame. These allegations have been strongly denied by Russian authorities, and to date only one individual, an ethnic Russian student living in Estonia, has been fined as a result of the attacks.

For Professor Sommer, misdiagnosis is easy: "All too quickly people say they know where the attack is coming from."

"My experience of doing investigations of all sizes is that very often the initial diagnosis is wrong."

"If you look at the recent Korean attacks it seems, at a political level, a reasonable supposition that it originated in North Korea because they’re the people that are most active at the moment.

"On the other hand, some of the reports say at a technical level they seem to have originated here in the United Kingdom, which makes no sense. So diagnosis is quite difficult."

However, one thing is certain: cyber warfare is here to stay.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Twitter and Facebook make Afghan election debut

Afghans may be desperately poor, largely illiterate and without electricity, but that does not stop would-be presidents campaigning in cyber space on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Mimicking tactics made famous by US President Barack Obama, one of the top contenders to rule Afghanistan

Germany accuses China of espionage

• Cyber sabotage and phone hacking rife, agent says
• Several Chinese workers caught stealing secrets

Germany is under attack from an increasing number of state-backed Chinese spying operations that are costing the German economy tens of billions of euros a year, a leading intelligence agent said.

Walter Opfermann, an espionage protection expert in the office for counter-intelligence for the state of Baden-Württemberg, said that China was using an array of “polished methods” from old-fashioned spies to phone-tapping, and increasingly the internet, to steal industrial secrets.

He said methods had become “extremely sophisticated” to the extent that China, which employs a million intelligence agents, was now capable of “sabotaging whole chunks of infrastructure” such as Germany’s power grid. “This poses a danger not just for Germany but for critical infrastructure worldwide,” he said.

Russia, he said, was also “top of the list” of states using internet spying techniques to garner vital German know-how which “helps save billions on their own economic research and development”. He said while Russia only had “hundreds of thousands of agents”, compared to China’s million, it had “years more experience”.

Opfermann estimated that German companies were losing around €50bn (£43bn) and 30,000 jobs to industrial espionage every year.

“China wants to be the world’s leading economic power by 2020,” Opfermann said. “For that they need a speedy and intensive transfer of high-level technological information which is available in developed industrial lands, if you can get your hands on it”.

The areas most under attack include car manufacturing, renewable energies, chemistry, communication, optics, x-ray technology, machinery, materials research and armaments. Information being gathered was not just related to research and development but also management techniques and marketing strategies.

Opfermann said internet espionage was the biggest growth field, citing the “thick fog of Trojan email attacks” taking place against thousands of firms on a regular basis and the methods employed to cover up where the emails had come from.

But he said “old-fashioned” methods were also rife, such as phone-tapping, stealing laptops during business trips or Chinese companies who regularly sent spies to infiltrate companies.

“I cannot name names but we’ve dealt with several cases of Chinese citizens on work experience in German companies, who stole highly sensitive information from them,” he said.

In one case, the police raided the house of a Chinese woman suspected of stealing company secrets from a German business where she was working, and discovered 170 CDs containing highly sensitive product details.

In a separate case a highly qualified Chinese mechanical engineer employed by a company in the Lake Constance region was discovered to have passed on information for a machine it was developing to the company’s Chinese competitor, who constructed an exact copy.

“As is often the case the man disappeared and went back to China – so often the attacker is way ahead of the game and it’s also hard to find out who they’ve been working for.”

Opfermann said although the problem was “huge and growing”, it was not being discussed, “because companies don’t want to admit their weaknesses and lose customers and they don’t want to ruin business opportunities with China. As a result we’re only seeing the tip of the iceberg.”

Two years ago the consultancy firm Corporate Trust estimated that around 20% of German companies – mainly small and middle-sized businesses – had been the victims of industrial espionage.The findings chime with fears across the industrial world about the threat of cyber crime and the corresponding increase in efforts being put in place to fight it.

In Britain last month the GCHQ, the government’s electronic spy centre, which estimates that the UK loses GBP 1bn a year to e-fraud, set up operations to deal with the growing threats. The Pentagon also announced it is to create a new “cyber command” and in May President Obama said he would establish a White House role to oversee cyber defence, saying the nation’s digital networks had to be recognised as a “strategic national asset”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Scientists devise cyber security ‘neighborhood watch’

Scientists at US DOE’s (Department of Energy’s) Argonne National Laboratory have devised a program that allows for Cyber Security defense systems to communicate when attacked and transmit that information to cyber systems at other institutions in the hopes of strengthening the overall cyber security posture of the complex.
“The Federated Model for Cyber Security acts as [...]

Cyber crooks get business savvy

By Maggie Shiels
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley

front pages on cyber security

Cyber crooks are increasingly operating like successful businesses, deploying the same tools legitimate companies use to boost their profits.

Networking giant Cisco said online criminals were increasingly using proven business practices.

In its mid-year security report, Cisco said this new approach puts the bad guys way ahead.

"When your enemy is financially motivated you have to be on alert," said Cisco fellow Patrick Peterson.

"Capitalism is a powerful force and these criminal types are collaborating with one another and sharing resources, renting out botnets and forming alliances."

He pointed to the popular model known as "software as a service," or SaaS, where a provider licences an application to a customer for use as a service on demand via the web saving costs for the user.

He said cyber-criminals were increasingly acting like virtual MBA (Master of Business Administration) students.

Mr Peterson also cited an increase in investment by the criminal community and its ability to offer off-the-shelf spyware and services like those dedicated to checking how well a piece of malware is performing.

Trends

Big news stories were a goldmine for cyber crooks said Cisco who mapped a massive rise in spam as news like the death of Michael Jackson broke.

"One of the most important themes for a business is customer acquisition," said Mr Peterson who is Cisco’s senior security researcher.

Papers

"We use Michael Jackson as a quintessential example. When the media was in the air and scrambling to cover his death, the bad guys were coming up with creative news copy that tried to persuade users to click on a photo, video or memorabilia to trick the user onto an infected site."

Cisco also said in the coming months it expected the level of spam to climb to record levels. In May just over 249 billion spam messages were sent – the third highest volume day ever.

The company also predicted a surge in attacks on legitimate websites. Recent Cisco data showed that exploited websites were responsible for nearly 90% of web-based threats.

Mobile phones are another growing concern with over four billion handsets in the world.

"SMS offers a big advantage to the criminal," explained Mr Peterson.

"We know not to click on e-mail or links but when you get a text from your bank asking you to call to verify your account details, you trust it."

These so called "smishing attacks" are expected to soar over the coming years.

"Popular haunts"

Cisco also noted that "the cyber criminals go where the users are, which means social networking sites are becoming more popular haunts for attackers."

The Kaspersky Lab Research Centre found that cyber crooks who use sites like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter to spread viruses and worms were ten times more successful in their attacks than if they had used e-mail.

Generic spam message

Cisco noted that "the open, simple communication structure of web 2.0-based applications is also its key weakness."

"It’s unfortunate but in places like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter where generally good people hang out and share information quickly and freely, there will be those who are not as honest who take advantage," said Ken Silva, the chief technology officer of VeriSign, a company that secures the internet.

One security vendor, Unisys told BBC News that web criminals are attracted to these sites because of the level of trust that can be exploited among users.

"This is all about the bad guys using your relationships with others to get you infected or pass along infections," said Nathan Shanks, senior security architect of the company’s global outsourcing unit.

"In this world it means that active members with hundreds of friends on Facebook or followers on Twitter will become more of a target."

E-mail signatures

Cisco’s Mr Peterson painted a depressing picture for the future.

"There is a fair bit of doom and a fair bit of gloom," he said.

malware search

"But the last 12 months have been the most heartening with some successful law enforcement cases putting the bad guys out of business."

Mr Peterson did however admit that it is a bit like the famed "whack-a-mole" game because every time they take someone out, there is another crook ready to fill in the gap.

"What is happening is unprecedented in the history of the world where a criminal is able to sit in Italy and commit highway robbery in France. And that is what we have here."

He said that while collaboration between law enforcement, industry and governments works well in the western world, it does not in places like China, Russia and the Ukraine.

"We just don’t speak the same language and we don’t have the contacts to quickly call up our counterparts and ask for help. We need a long term strategic approach and we need to continue to whack the criminals and their partners where we can reach them.

"The bad guys are innovating like crazy and we need to give our customers and enterprises security that is good enough," said Mr Peterson.

VeriSign’s Mr Silva said there is one simple solution but, so far, few seem willing to grab at it.

"If we could attach a digital signature to our e-mails and communications then you would be able to trust that e-mail. Today we don’t really know if the person who says they sent an e-mail is really that person.

"I would never do business in the real world with someone if I couldn’t validate who they are so why do we do it online

"I don’t know how much money has to be stolen or how many people have to be hurt emotionally and physically before someone figures out there is a real problem here," said Mr Silva. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

North Korea Army, Lab 110, Suspected Over Cyber Attacks

SEOUL, South Korea — A North Korean army lab of hackers was ordered to “destroy” South Korean communications networks _ evidence the isolated regime was behind cyberattacks that paralyzed South Korean and American Web sites _ news report…