Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Global internet slows after 'biggest attack in history


The internet around the world has been slowed down in what security experts are describing as the biggest cyber-attack in history. A row between a spam-fighting group and hosting firm has sparked retaliation attacks flooding core infrastructure. It is having an impact on widely used services like Netflix - and experts worry it could escalate to affect banking and email services.

Five national cyber-police-forces are investigating the attacks. Spamhaus, a group based in both London and Geneva, is a non-profit organisation which aims to help email providers filter out spam and other unwanted content. To do this, the group maintains a number of blocklists - a database of servers known to be being used for malicious purposes.

Recently, Spamhaus blocked servers maintained by Cyberbunker, a Dutch web host which states it will host anything with the exception of child pornography or terrorism-related material. Sven Olaf Kamphuis, who claims to be a spokesman for Cyberbunker, said, in a message, that Spamhaus was abusing its position, and should not be allowed to decide "what goes and does not go on the internet".Spamhaus has alleged that Cyberbunker, in cooperation with "criminal gangs" from Eastern Europe and Russia, is behind the attack.
Cyberbunker has as yet offered no reply to the BBC when contacted directly.

Immense job

Steve Linford, chief executive for Spamhaus, told the BBC the scale of the attack was unprecedented.
"We've been under this cyber-attack for well over a week. "But we're up - they haven't been able to knock us down. Our engineers are doing an immense job in keeping it up - this sort of attack would take down pretty much anything else." Mr Linford told the BBC that the attack was being investigated by five different national cyber-police-forces around the world, but said he was unable to disclose more details as the forces in question were concerned that they too may suffer attacks on their own infrastructure.

The attackers have used a tactic known as Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS), which floods the intended target with large amounts of traffic in an attempt to render it unreachable. In this case, Spamhaus's Domain Name System (DNS) servers were targeted - the infrastructure that joins domain names, such as bbc.co.uk, the website's numerical internet protocol address. Mr Linford said the attack's power would be strong enough to take down government internet infrastructure. "If you aimed this at Downing Street they would be down instantly," he said. "They would be completely off the internet." He added: "These attacks are peaking at 300 gb/s (gigabits per second).

"Normally when there are attacks against major banks, we're talking about 50 gb/s."

Clogged-up motorway'Clogged-up motorway

The knock-on effect is hurting internet services globally, said Prof Alan Woodward, a cybersecurity expert at the University of Surrey. "If you imagine it as a motorway, attacks try and put enough traffic on there to clog up the on and off ramps," he told the BBC. "With this attack, there's so much traffic it's clogging up the motorway itself." Spamhaus is able to cope, the group says, as it has highly distributed infrastructure in a number of countries.

The group is supported by many of the world's largest internet companies who rely on it to filter unwanted material. Mr Linford told the BBC that several companies, such as Google, had made their resources available to help "absorb all of this traffic".

The attacks typically happened in intermittent bursts of high activity. "They are targeting every part of the internet infrastructure that they feel can be brought down," Mr Linford said.
"We can't be brought down. "Spamhaus has more than 80 servers around the world. We've built the biggest DNS server around."


Source

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4: What to expect from the most anticipated smartphone of 2013



In an attempt to steal the thunder from Nokia, Asus, Sony, and a slew of other mobile device makers at Mobile World Congress 2013 in Barcelona, Samsung has announced that the Galaxy S4 will be unveiled at its own exclusive event in New York on March 14, with public availability to follow soon after.
With the slow but inexorable waning of the iPhone, both in terms of mind and market share, the Galaxy S4 is probably the most anticipated phone of 2013. The question on everyone’s lips, though, is whether Samsung can push the smartphone (and Android) envelope forward, despite lackluster innovation from Apple — and in the face of strong offerings from HTC. Let’s run through the expected hardware and software specs of the Samsung Galaxy S4, and then analyze the current state of play in the mobile space.

Hardware

The Samsung Galaxy S4 is expected to have a full-HD 1920×1080 display (up from 1280×720 on the S3) — and the display might even make the jump from 4.8 inches to an edge-to-edge 5 inches. There were some early rumors of a flexible display, but they can be discounted — the tech just isn’t there yet. It remains to be seen whether the underlying tech will be AMOLED or LCD, though reports suggest that Samsung’s AMOLED production line isn’t ready to produce 1920×0180 5-inch displays, while the LCD production line is raring to go. Maybe this will mean that the Galaxy S4 can finally compete with the iPhone in terms of image quality and accuracy.
Samsung Exynos 5 Octa SOCUnder the hood, the Galaxy S4 is expected to use Qualcomm’s quad-core Snapdragon 600 or 800 SoC. The Snapdragon 800 is particularly exciting because it’s the first chip to be built on TSMC’s new 28nm HPM (high performance mobile) process — though, at 2.3GHz, it might be more of a tablet part. There is also the possibility that we’ll see two Galaxy S4 SKUs — a Snapdragon model with integrated LTE for the US market, and an Exynos-powered model for the rest of the world. If the S4 does use Exynos, the most likely option is an eight-core Exynos 5 Octa — four Cortex-A15 and four Cortex-A7 in a big.LITTLE configuration. There are still big questions about whether the power-hungry Cortex-A15 is suitable for smartphone use, so it will be interesting to see how the Galaxy S4 pans out.
Rounding out the hardware, the Galaxy S4 is expected to have a high-res camera (13MP, according to some rumors), up to 64GB of flash storage, and 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM. Following the weak, uncertain, and confusing introduction of wireless charging in the Galaxy S3, we expect the S4 to rectify the situation and provide wireless charging by default. You can also expect all of the usual kitchen sink: WiFi (which should step up to MIMO), Bluetooth, GPS, NFC, and so on.

Software

There are unlikely to be any surprises in the software department: The Galaxy S4 will almost certainly run a TouchWizzified version of Android 4.2 Jelly Bean (sorry, Tizen fans — keep on dreaming). There is also a rumor that the Galaxy S4 will launch with a pad accessory, which, when bonded with S Health, will give your phone the ability to measure your pulse and blood sugar, among other things.

Evolution, not revolution

In short, all indicators point to the Galaxy S4 being a fairly gentle evolution of the Galaxy S3 — a lot like the iPhone 4 and 5. A 5-inch screen would be exciting, but it really isn’t that different from 4.8 inches. An octa-core Exynos would certainly offer a unique selling point — but when you remember that four of those cores are wimpy, and that the Cortex-A15 cores are the reason your smartphone only lasts for six hours, your excitement will be quickly tempered. A laser keyboard, like the one shown in the (fan-made) video below is unlikely.
Truth be told, we would all be wise to temper our expectations when it comes to smartphone and tablet technology. There are some exciting concepts coming down the pipe, but we are probably still years away from flexible, transparent smartphones, or high-capacity batteries that can support pico projectors and other power-hungry features. (See:DoE calls for a chemical battery with 5x capacity, within 5 years – can it be done?) It’s easy to be fooled by the dramatic bombast pumped out by Apple, Samsung, and others, but  actual paradigm-shifting technologies really don’t come along very often. It has been five years since the launch of the first smartphone, and we’re still firmly in the penumbra of the capacitive touchscreen; processors have got faster and screens have got larger, but that’s just the continuing, predictable, and thoroughly non-revolutionary march of Moore’s law.
Don’t get me wrong: A mind-blowing smartphone that redefines the very meaning of the word will eventually come along — just probably not today.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Anonymous Protest Goes From Internet to Real Life. #Occupy India on June 9



A bunch of stuff has happened since we last reported about ISP’s blocking a bunch of Internet sites, and Anonymous India retaliating. Amongst other things, their twitter account was banned, but they are back up again. More government sites were targeted, This time it was not just DDoS attacks, but they actually hacked into the sites to put up their message of the #Occupy movement.
One of the interesting things that happened was that Anonymous also hacked into Reliance Communications servers and what they found was startling. Reliance was blocking access to sites that had no court order against them which is basically a crime. Here is a list of sites blocked illegally by Reliance, and a message from Anonymous - http://pastehtml.com/view/bz8kycy0o.html. One of the blocked URL’s is the Air India’s protest Facebook page! #WTH

Anonymous also temporarily blocked access to facebook.com, to draw attention to the cause, but the site was accessible via www.facebook.com.

After this, Anonymous hacked Trinamool Congress‘ and Mizoram government’s websites, and put up a message for the masses about the peaceful Occupy movement. They did not take down the main Mizoram site, but only took down a bunch of sub-domains. Here is a list of the sub-domains, all corresponding to different departments.

And now the important part : #Occupy India

Anonymous has decided to take the protest on the streets, and the date is July 9th. It is happening in Delhi Mumbai, and many other major cities all over India.

When Anonymous hacked the Mizoram sites, they put up this message -

The Future of India, Rise for your Nation

Join the June 9 Protest with Anonymous, Fight for your Freedom

To the Students of India,
You are the future of this nation and hence it is your decision to make at this critical point. You out of all people will understand the oppression of others, rule of Elite, corruption and denial of rights better than any one. We have come to a time in which we can’t even speak freely and even to the point where we are not allowed to think freely. They tell you to Sit in class, Obey the rules, don’t allow you to speak, and once you are outside the classes they take your freedom, even at a place where everything is supposed to be yours! We are calling to every student and youth soul to join us for the struggle of freedom. On this June 9th we are calling for every one to get on the streets, organize protests or join one. Do not wait any longer, because the more you wait the more this system will crush your rights and abilities to correct it.Today they took away your right to use a few websites, tomorrow they will sensor the websites like they sensor the media so that nothing against them get’s reported and day after tomorrow they will take away your freedom of speech and no one will be there to speak for you. Speak Now or Never.

Led Zeplin’s Kashmir played in the background. [ Another weird thing happened, as I was trying to report the hacked site to zone-h.org to mirror it, I found out that zone-h has also been blocked in India due to an unrelated court order. What is the Indian government doing? ]

Check out if the protest is happening in your city and if you are going to one of these protests, you can download and print the Anonymous mask here. Also note that Anonymous has strict guidelines to keep the protest peaceful.

In Delhi it will happen at the India Gate. If there is no protest happening in you city, just create an event on Facebook, and tweet it to their account with the hashtag #June9. Or you could chat with them on IRC.

Source

Thursday, May 17, 2012

'Operation India' engaged DOT is Next, warns Anonymous after hacking Supreme Court and All India Congress websites

New Delhi:  Hacker group Anonymous has brought  down the websites of the Supreme Court and the Congress party. In an audio message posted on YouTube, the hackers say they protesting against the blocking of file-sharing websites like RapidShare and popular video websites like Vimeo. "We cannot let censorship happen... Operation India engaged" the audio message warns.

(Hear message posted by Anonymous, warns "Operation India engaged")

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) like Airtel, Reliance and others have blocked these websites. The internet service providers say the blocking has been done in  "in response to a court order".

According to tweets from the @opindia_revenge account (which was retweeted by the official Twitter account of Anonymous), the hacktivists have taken down http://supremecourtofindia.nic.in  and http://aicc.org.in and intends to take down the website of Department of Telecommunication (http://dot.gov.in) and of the Chennai-based Copyright Labs (http://www.copyrightlabs.in) which had issued the John Doe order to various ISPs to block Vimeo, DailyMotion and all major torrent sites in the country to prevent the piracy of their tamil films Dammu and 3.

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Friday, March 2, 2012

Technology writers give Microsoft a thumbs up as Windows 8 released for public testing

Windows Live Division President Steven Sinofsky at the Windows 8 Consumer Preview presentation in Barcelona on Feb. 29. Microsoft's new operating system uses a system of tiles to manage applications. David Pogue of the New York Times calls it 'a Lego kit for your life’s control panel."


BARCELONA/SEATTLE—Microsoft Corp opened up an incomplete version of Windows 8 for the public to download and test on Wednesday, looking to rev up excitement for its slick, new-look operating system which it hopes will restore its fading tech supremacy. (See below to find out what the tech sites had to say.)

Windows 8, as the first Microsoft operating system compatible with low-power microprocessors designed by ARM Holdings Plc, will run on tablets as well as desktops and laptops, in an effort to counter the runaway success of Apple Inc’s iPad.

“It’s an even better Windows than Windows 7,” said Steven Sinofsky, head of Microsoft’s flagship Windows unit, as he demonstrated the new system at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Windows 7, Microsoft’s last operating system, was its fastest-selling ever, racking up 525 million sales in less than three years.

“It’s incredibly fast and fluid to just navigate this UI (user interface)”, said Sinofsky, showing off Windows 8 on a tablet and an ultra-thin laptop at the event in Barcelona.

The test version of Windows 8 is available for download here. Sinofsky said people from 70 countries had already downloaded the software on Wednesday morning, but he did not give exact numbers.

The downloadable version will only work on laptops and PCs running traditional Intel x86 chips. The ARM-compatible version of the system is not yet ready for public use. Microsoft has said it will distribute ARM tablets running Windows 8 to select developers at some point.

Microsoft says it is aiming to get machines running on both the ARM and Intel platforms into the market at the same time but has not set a target date. The world’s largest software company generally tries to bring out a new version of Windows every three years, so that would indicate a full release date around October this year, in time for the holiday shopping season.

In both versions, Windows 8 features a completely new interface, borrowed from what Microsoft calls the “Metro” style of the current Windows Phone software. It features blocks or “tiles” that can be moved around the screen or tapped to go straight into an application.

Microsoft said the latest version of Windows 8 unveiled on Wednesday has better performance, quality and reliability than the version it released to developers last autumn.

For the first time, this version of Windows 8 includes the Windows Store, where users can download and try out free apps, get access to cloud storage with the ability to move content across a range of devices including Windows phones, and download a test version of Microsoft’s newest browser, Internet Explorer 10.

Source

Sunday, February 12, 2012

10,000,000,000,000,000 calculations per second.

Paying a visit to the fastest computer on earth.

The "K Computer"

In today's ever-more digitalized world, we all have a tale or two to share about how personal computers have let us down: like how they refused to let us run different programs at the same time or how the data was so heavy that the damned device kept us on hold forever before conducting even the most trivial operation.

Well, there is one machine in the world — and it's in Japan — that is absolutely free of such concerns, being the fastest computer on Earth and capable of handling a mind-boggling number of tasks in far less than the blink of an eye.

Tadashi Watanabe led the K computer project at RIKEN  (TOMOKO OTAKE PHOTOS)
 In June and November last year, the K computer — jointly developed by the IT giant Fujitsu and housed at the RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science (AICS) in Kobe — was ranked No. 1 in the TOP500 list of the world's fastest computers. The ranking is announced twice a year at the SC conference of supercomputing experts — also known as the International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis.

The K computer — which will be available for shared use by researchers in November — is named after the Japanese numerical unit 京 (kei), meaning 10 quadrillion, or 10,000 trillion. By achieving the targeted 10 petaflops, a measure of computer performance equaling 10 quadrillion calculations — or floating-point operations, to be precise — per second, K lived up to its name in November.

If humans were to perform the same number of calculations as K does in a second, it would take the world's entire population of 7 billion people — each tackling one problem per second — 17 consecutive days.
In that latest November ranking, the K computer was proved to be four times faster than the runner-up, a Chinese machine named Tianhe-1A. Developed by the National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, Tianhe-1A achieved 2.566 petaflops, followed by the American supercomputer Jaguar, installed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, and run by the U.S. Department of Energy, which ranked 3rd, marking 1.759 petaflops.

So what's the secret to this overwhelming speed ?

Fujitsu's SPARC64 VIIIfix processor, which measures about 2 cm x 2 cm.
The hardware of which has been completed but which still has system software under development — looked like rows and rows of tall refrigerators neatly lined up in a huge warehouse. It is made up of 864 fridge-like units called "racks." Each rack — 80 cm wide, 75 cm deep and 206 cm tall — contains 24 system boards tacked on top of each other and connected by cables. Each system board carries four CPUs (central processing units), which make up the "brain" of computers. While normal PCs are mounted with just one CPU, K has a total of 82,944 custom-made CPUs.
 
One of K's 20,736 system boards carrying four CPUs, which feature water pipes to keep the units cool FUJITSU.




 One of the greatest technological breakthroughs for K was to get these microprocessors — measuring 2.27 cm x 2.26 cm apiece — working efficiently together to achieve the maximum speed, explained Akihiko Fujino, a senior manager at Fujitsu's Technical Computing Solutions Unit. To that end, the engineers came up with a "six-dimensional" network of CPUs that allows for rapid exchange of data across the system.

Dubbed "Tofu" technology the "six-dimensional torus interconnect" creates a number of channels through which data can travel. This can be easily explained using train lines as an analogy: To get from JR Shinjuku Station to JR Tokyo Station, for example, you can take the Yamanote loop line in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction, passing through many stations along the way. But you can get to the destination much faster if you take the Chuo Line, which cuts the loop in half and connects the two stations directly across the loop. K uses a similar concept, connecting different elements of the computer network multidimensionally.

 In addition, to save energy and stabilize the machine's operation, each system board has extensive copper plumbing, with cooling water running through it to keep the CPUs from overheating.

"K's CPU, which we ourselves developed, has succeeded in striking the right balance between speed and energy efficiency," Fujino said. "Its electric power consumption is about 60 percent of that of Intel processors (used in many supercomputers)."

 Tadashi Watanabe, the K project leader at AICS, also pointed to the building's unique architectural features that were designed for the computer. In order to dissipate heat from the densely racked system, the computer room uses air cooling, through which cold air blows from under the floor, cools the racks, hits the ceiling and then gets sent downstairs via air passageways in the periphery of the room.

The exterior the RIKEN AICS building in Kobe's Port Island
In addition, to connect the 864 racks, 200,000 cables with a total length of more than 1,000 km are used, Watanabe said. In order to efficiently configure the racks and cables, the third floor of the building — a space covering 50 meters by 60 meters — is free of structural pillars. That meant the building itself had to be designed to be extra sturdy. Also, dampers placed in the building's basement are capable of absorbing shocks from earthquakes with an intensity of Shindo 6 (in the Japanese seismic scale of 0-7), and anti-liquefaction measures have been taken on the man-made Kobe Port Island plot where the institute is located.

But enough about the technicalities of the computer and the site: What will K be able to offer that others cannot — when it goes fully operational in November?

Engineers, scientists and government officials who have pushed for the K-project all say that supercomputers on the scale of K can greatly advance simulations — the so-called "third science" after theory and experiment.
"While simulations and computational sciences have long been called the third science, we have not been able to accomplish much because of limitations in the computers' ability," said Kimihiko Hirao, AICS director and himself a researcher in the field of computational chemistry. "But with K, we can start simulating many things scientifically — like detailed simulations of damage from the Tonankai earthquakes (ones that that hit areas along the Pacific Coast all the way from Shizuoka to Kochi every 100 to 150 years). It enables real predictions in many fields."

The K-computer project, which started in 2006, is the first one backed by the Japanese government since the Earth Simulator project, which won the top spot in the Top 500 list back in 2002, achieving 35.86 teraflops in the same benchmarking program. (1,000 teraflops equals one petaflop.) But while the Earth Simulator, developed by NEC Corp. and installed at the Yokohama center of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, was designed specifically for the purpose of simulating climate change models, the K-computer is built to be universal — to accommodate all kinds of simulation needs. Thus it is hoped to accelerate the R&D and design of a wide range of products and services — from jet engines to silicon semiconductors, to new drugs and to tsunami warning systems.

K's reputation as the world's No. 1 computer could be short-lived, however. The race for supercomputing supremacy between the United States, Japan and, most recently, China, is intense, and the U.S. "Sequoia" computer — a 20 petaflops machine being developed by IBM and set to be installed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California — is poised to overtake K later this year. This comes as no shock to industry experts.

"It is a known fact that the first-place winner in the Top 500 list is normally twice as fast as the winner from the previous year, and even 1,000 times faster than the top machine 10 years ago," said Naoki Shinjo, another Fujitsu official in charge of system development at the firm's next-generation technical computing unit. "So it's only natural that someone else will take the top spot next year."

Experts even predict the arrival of "exa-scale" computers — which are 1,000 times faster than 1-petaflops-level computers, and 100 times faster than K — by 2018.

Though Japan has yet to decide whether, and how, to take on the exa-scale project, experts say that the greatest technical challenge awaiting any machine surpassing K will be its energy consumption. While being among the most energy-efficient machines in the Top 500, K still needs 17 megawatts to run, which means that its annual power consumption is equivalent to an aggregated total of that of 25,000 average households. And the environmental impact of computing is under increasing scrutiny these days, as seen in a recent controversy over a U.S. scientist's estimate that every two Google searches uses enough energy to boil a kettle.

"The biggest bottleneck to the future development of supercomputers is energy," AICS's Hirao admitted. "If we are to develop a machine 100 times faster than K, we would still have to keep the level of power consumption at the current level. That means that the new computer will have to be 100 times more energy efficient. That would definitely be the biggest challenge."


Saturday, February 11, 2012

Flipkart acquires Letsbuy, fashion retailer Myntra raises Rs 100 crore.





Online retailer Flipkart bought Letsbuy, and specialised fashion retailer Myntra said it has raised $21 million (100 crore) on Thursday, both transactions underscoring the rapid evolution of India's e-commerce industry.

Flipkart, one the country's biggest online retailers, said it has acquired smaller rival Letsbuy in a cash and stock deal without specifying the value of the transaction. But people familiar with the matter said it was worth around $20 million.

"This acquisition opportunity came at a very attractive price for us and the timing has also been ideal," Flipkart's cofounder and chief executive officer Sachin Bansal was quoted as saying in a statement. Letsbuy, a seller of consumer electronic goods, has been struggling to raise additional money and was left with little option but to do a deal with Flipkart, a manager at a private equity firm said.

Tiger Global and Accel Partners are both investors in Letsbuy and Flipkart.

"Investors push for such acquisitions as it makes strategic sense for them," said Raja Lahiri, a partner at Grant Thornton.

Online retailers are racing to consolidate their gains as they prepare for the entry of global competition once the government approves foreign direct investment in multi-brand retail. Last week, the world largest e-commerce player, Amazon, made a quiet entry into India through comparison shopping site junglee.com, which it owns. Amazon insists that Junglee is not a trading platform but Indian online retailers believe the writing on the wall is clear.

"Amazon's entry means bigger competition and hence large Indian players will look at strategic opportunities to grow the scale and size of business," said Lahiri.

The online retail industry appears to be coalescing into two distinct types: one that comprises large multibrand retailers and another consisting of specialised sellers of high-margins products such as jewellery and fashion apparel. The successful fundraising by Myntra, a fashion retailer, is an indicator of this trend.


Tiger Global led the round for Myntra with existing investors IndoUS Venture Partners, IDG Ventures India and Accel Partners participating. Myntra has raised a total of $38 million in four rounds, said founder Mukesh Bansal.

Flipkart has announced raising $31 million so far and is believed to be in talks to raise $100-$150 million as it looks to scale rapidly.

"Smaller companies will find it difficult to raise funds unless they have something new to offer," said Sudhir Sethi, a technology investor who is the chairman of IDG Ventures.

Source

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Microsoft drops Start button from Windows 8

Microsoft will scratch the 17-year-old Start button from Windows 8, according to reports based on a purported leak of the latest beta build.

First reported by The Verge yesterday and then followed by other blogs -- all seemingly based on screenshots posted in a Chinese forum that claim the images are from the newest private "build" of the beta -- the Start button has been discarded in favor of a corner "hotspot" that when touched or clicked switches between the traditional desktop and the new Metro-style Start display.

Microsoft declined to comment on the reports, with a company spokeswoman saying, "We have no information to share at this time."
The Windows 8 Developer Preview, which Microsoft made available to the general public last September, includes a Start button that toggles between the new operating system's Metro Start page and the more familiar desktop.

Microsoft first used the Start button in Windows 95, when it reportedly paid the Rolling Stones millions for the rights to the band's song "Start Me Up" to use at the launch and in subsequent commercials. (Microsoft executives later disputed that, saying the company paid the Stones "a small fraction" of a widely-cited range of $8 million-$14 million.)
Windows 95 debuted in August 1995, and was marked by a dramatic overhaul of Windows 3.1's user interface. 
The Verge and others based their reports on unnamed sources as well as screenshots published over the weekend on a Chinese-language forum. The screenshots claimed to be of Build 8220 of the upcoming Windows 8 public beta, which evidence hints will actually be called "Consumer Preview" rather than "Beta."
Replacing the Start button, according to the reports, will be a "hot corner" at the lower left. When that invisible hotspot is touched or clicked, the interface switches from desktop to Metro, or vice versa. That location is where the Start button currently resides in the Windows 8 Developer Preview.
Microsoft has said that Windows 8 will use a "touch-first" interface where the traditional desktop is demoted to an alternate view.
According to reports, Microsoft will drop the Start button from Windows 8, and replace it with an invisible "hotspot" to toggle between the Metro-style Start page and the traditional desktop.


The beta -- or Consumer Preview -- of Windows 8 will be released late this month, Microsoft first said in December 2011. The company has yet to narrow the launch date, however.

The Windows 8 Developer Preview can still be downloaded from Microsoft's website.



 Source

Thursday, February 2, 2012

NASA, Pentagon Hacker TinKode Arrested in Romania



Police in Romania said they have nabbed the notorious hacker TinKode, who is known for breaking into U.S. government and military Web sites and exposing security shortfalls in their systems.

The accused hacker, Razvan Manole Cernaianu, accessed high profile computer systems without authorization, including those belonging to the Pentagon and NASA, then posted evidence of his attacks online, the Romanian Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism, said in a statement Tuesday. Cernaianu, a 20 year-old IT student from Timisoara, Romania, broke into servers belonging to the U.S. Army and stole confidential information, which he published on his blog, authorities said.
He also posted a video on his blog demonstrating an attack he carried out against the U.S. government, and created and offered for sale a computer program used to hack Web sites. Through his exploits, Cernaianu blocked access to systems and seriously disabled their proper functioning, authorities said.


Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at security firm Sophos, said in a blog post Tuesday that TinKode often published information online about security flaws in the systems he hacked. The hacker was likely seeking bragging rights, rather than financial gains, Cluley added.

"In my estimation over the last few years TinKode's motivation has been more about mischief-making than the more malicious attacks we often see, fueled by a desire for publicity via his active Twitter and Facebook accounts," Cluley wrote. "Perhaps now is a good time to remind everyone who thinks it's cool or amusing to expose an organization’s weak security that hacking into a site is still a crime, regardless of what your incentive may be."

Romanian authorities said the FBI and NASA took part in the investigation. TinKode also previously claimed credit for an attack against the Web site for Britain's Royal Navy.







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