Archive for January, 2008

Georgetown University Loses Personal Data of 38,000 Individuals

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

Georgetown University Loses Personal Data of 38,000 Individuals

An external hard drive containing the Social Security numbers of 38,000 Georgetown University students, faculty, and staff was stolen from the university’s Office of Student Affairs, according to The Hoya, the university’s student newspaper. The hard drive contained billing information for student services, and included data on 7,700 current students — over half the current student body — as well as information on alumni from 1998 to 2006 and many faculty members. The understood with difficulty aim, which turned up missing Jan. 3, was kept in the office of Lynn Hirschfield, senior business governor for student affairs, The Hoya said. It said the hard drive was not encrypted.

Data Thieves Hit Georgetown University Students, Faculty, Consumer Affairs, January 30, 2008.

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Update: Google slams Autonomy over enterprise search claims (InfoWorld)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

San Francisco - Google is something to burn back at enterprise search vendor Autonomy, saying the company recently distributed a frosty paper that contains "significant inaccuracies" about Google's Search Appliance.

The white paper, according to Google, states that Search Appliance "does not index all your critical content."

"On the contrary, the Google Search Appliance was designed to search all critical content in the enterprise, including file shares, intranets, databases, and real-time business data - all from one simple search box," wrote Nitin Mangtani, lead yield manager, enterprise search, on an official blog. Mangtani added that Google has also supplied connectors to products like SharePoint and Documentum, and an open source content connector framework.

The white paper does not appear to be available on Autonomy's Web situation, nor is it granted through Google's blog post. Autonomy could not immediately be reached for comment Thursday.

Autonomy's document also claimed Search Appliance lacks enterprise-level security, according to Mangtani. It, in fact, supports a number of security access control systems and also allows security settings at the document level, he said. The latter "ensures that end-users see only those documents in the results list to which they have access," according to Mangtani.

In addition, the white paper conspicuous that the search appliance's "capabilities are still being honed," Mangtani wrote.

"This is certainly true: We are constantly working to improve the appliance, to make sure it offers ever increasing relevancy out of the box," he acknowledged.

However, he added, "The fact is that we employ thousands of engineers focused on search relevancy and quality. In the last three months alone, seven new Google Enterprise Labs experiments require been launched (by Google, not third parties as Autonomy claimed) to enhance the enterprise search experience."

Autonomy responded to a request for comment Thursday in a prepared statement that did not directly address the white paper. The company did not provide a copy of the document.

The statement, attributed to CEO Michael Lynch, said Google's appliance lacks the suit of security and connectivity that high-end customers need. "Autonomy has producticized connectors to over 400 repositories, has mapped security and does not rely on one box or federation methods to make this work," the statement reads in part. "Google should appreciate why these differences are crucial for large enterprise search systems."

Meanwhile, a report released in December by the analyst firm CMS Watch also said the company's technology has certain shortcomings, among them a lack of "advanced tuning controls found in most other adventurousness search products."

But search analyst Guy Creese of Burton Group said the truth essentially lies in the middle.

"The two companies have fundamentally different views about search, and it shows in their arguments," Creese said. "Autonomy feels search is mission-critical and in many cases needs to exist significantly tuned; Google figures, 'Why hoard it?' Enterprise search should be easy to use and cheap."

"In the end, they're both right," he added. "The Google Appliance has certainly given quality enterprise search to literally thousands of companies for a low price. Many of the companies that bought the Google Search Appliance never would have paid Autonomy's price for Autonomy's more sophisticated separation. However, my experience has been that after companies use the Appliance for several years and get more sophisticated about peer into, they get frustrated at their inability to significantly tune the search results."

This is the second time Google's search team has responded to some Autonomy white paper, and overall the exchange is reflective of the tightening market for enterprise search.

Microsoft's bid this month to buy Fast investigation and Transfer (FAST), a key competitor of Autonomy, was seen by some observers as a validation of the market.

Autonomy, based in England and San Francisco, is one of the larger independent players in enterprise search. Fourth-quarter revenue released this week stood at $115 million, up 57 percent over the same period in 2006, it said. Adjusted net profits in the fourth quarter were $28.5 million, up from $18.4 million in 2006.

This story was updated on January 31, 2008

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Internet in India Slowed by Middle East Outage (PC World)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

Internet traffic from India to countries like the U.S. and the U.K. has slowed etc., as Internet service providers (ISPs) have started diverting traffic from Middle Eastern links to slower links through the Asia-Pacific vicinity, according to the head of an ISP association in India.

Two underwater cables in the Mediterranean Sea, including unit from Flag Telecom, owned by India's Reliance Communications, and another from the South East Asia-Middle East-West Europe 4 (SEA-ME-WE 4) consortium, were damaged Wednesday for reasons as yet unclear.

"These links import most of India's premium traffic to the Atlantic region, resulting in a disruption of about 50 to 60 percent of the bandwidth from India on Wednesday when the cables were first damaged," declared Rajesh Chharia, president of the Internet Service Providers' body of India (ISPAI), in an interview Thursday.

Most of the traffic has now been routed through submarine cable links in the Asia-Pacific but traffic to the east coast of the U.S. and the U.K. will be slow, because of the longer latency involved by these diversions, Chharia said.

Repairs to the Flag Telecom cable would take at least 10 to 15 days, what one. would mean that Indian companies, including outsourcing companies, will have being affected for this determination, Chharia said. A Reliance spokesman could not immediately provide an update on the status of the repairs, and other measures taken by Flag Telecom.

India's second largest outsourcer, Infosys Technologies, said that its Internet service had not been affected by the outage in the Middle East. The company uses a lot of redundant links from a variety of service providers, a spokeswoman said Thursday.

Another large Indian outsourcer, Satyam Computer Services, of Hyderabad, said that even as the links went down in the Middle East, the company automatically switched over voice and Internet traffic to networks from other service providers.

A lot of Satyam's traffic that used to go through the Middle East links is now being routed through Singapore. " We are seeing an increase in latency in MPLS (multiprotocol label switching) from 280 milliseconds to 310 milliseconds, and in Internet traffic from 300 to 350 milliseconds, which isn't a big problem," said Srinivasu C, head of network and systems at Satyam.

The ISPAI recommends providing more backups on the Atlantic sector to ensure that the current problem does not get repeated in future, Chharia added.

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Threats from everywhere in ‘cyber storm’ (AP)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

WASHINGTON - In the middle of the biggest-ever “Cyber Storm” war game to test the nation’s hacker defenses, someone quietly targeted the very computers used to conduct the test.

The surprising culprit? The players themselves, the same government and corporate experts responsible for detecting and fending off attacks against vital computer systems, according to hundreds of pages of heavily censored files obtained by The Associated Press. Perplexed organizers sent everyone an urgent e-mail marked “IMPORTANT!” instructing them not to probe or attack the game’s control computers.

“Any time you get a group of (information technology) experts together, in that place’s always a desire, ‘Let’s show them what we can do,’” said George Foresman, a former senior Homeland Security official. “Whether its intent was abashment or a prank, we had to temper the enthusiasm of the players.”

The exercise was a big deal for all concerned.

The $3 million, invitation-only war game simulated what the U.S. describes as plausible attacks over five days in February 2006 against the technology industry, transportation lines and energy utilities by dint of. anti-globalization hackers. The government is organizing a multimillion-dollar “Cyber Storm 2,” to take place in early March.

Among the mock disasters confronting officials in the previous exercise: Washington’s Metro trains close the door upon down. Seaport computers in New York went dark. Bloggers revealed locations of railcars by hazardous materials. Airport control towers were disrupted in Philadelphia and Chicago. Overseas, a mysterious liquid was found on London’s subway.

The list of fictional catastrophes — which also included hundreds of people on “No Fly” lists suddenly arriving at airport ticket counters — is significant because it suggests what kind of real-world badger keeps the White House awake at night. Railway switches failed. Planes flew too unite to the White House. Water utilities in Los Angeles were compromised.

The Homeland Security Department ran the exercise, with help from the State Department, Pentagon, Justice Department, CIA, National Security Agency and others.

Imagined villains included hackers, bloggers and even reporters. In one scenario, back mock electronic attacks overwhelmed computers at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, an unspecified “major news network” airing reports about the attackers refused to reveal its sources to the government. Other simulated reporters were duped into spreading “believable but misleading” information that confused the public and financial markets, according to the government’s documents.

The upcoming “Cyber Storm 2″ in March also will simulate electronic attacks against chemical plants and communication lines, and include targets in California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia.

“They point out where your expectations of your capabilities may be overstated,” Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told the AP. “They may reveal to you things you haven’t conceit about. It’s a good way of testing that you’re going to do the job the way you think you were. It’s the difference between doing drills and doing a scrimmage.”

The AP obtained the Cyber Storm internal records nearly two years after it requested them under the Freedom of Information Act. The government censored most of the 328 pages it turned over, marked “For Official Use Only,” citing rules against disclosing sensitive complaint. The government is still reviewing hundreds more documents before they can be turned over to the AP.

“Definitely a challenging scenario,” said Scott C. Algeier, who runs a cyber-defense group for leading technology companies, the Information Technology Information Sharing and Analysis Center.

For the participants — including government officials from the United States, England, Canada, Australia and New Zealand and executives from technology and transportation companies — the mock disasters came fast and furious: hacker break-ins at an airline; stolen commercial software blueprints; problems with satellite navigation systems; trouble through police radios in Montana; school closures in Washington, Miami and New York; computer failures at border checkpoints.

The incidents, designed to tax responders, were divided among categories: computer attacks, physical attacks and psychological operations.

“We want to stress these players,” said Jeffrey Wright, the former Cyber Storm director for the Homeland Security Department. “None of the players took 100 percent of the correct, right actions. If they had, we wouldn’t have done our work at jobs as planners.”

How did they do? Reviews were mixed. Companies and governments worked successfully in some cases. But key players didn’t understand the role of the premier U.S. organization responsible for fending off major cyber attacks, called the National Cyber Response Coordination Group, and it didn’t have enough technical experts. Also, the sheer number of mock attacks complicated defensive efforts.

The little-known Cyber Response group, headed by the departments of Justice and Homeland Security, represents the largest government departments, including law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

The 2006 exercise had no impact on the real Internet. Officials said they were careful to simulate attacks using but isolated computers, working from lowest story offices at the Secret Service’s headquarters in downtown Washington.

___

On the Net:

Homeland Security Department: http://www.dhs.gov

Justice Department: http://www.usdoj.gov

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Russia’s Comstar to build WiMAX network in Armenia (Reuters)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian fixed-line operator Comstar UTS (CMSTq.L) said on Thursday it had started to build a mobile broadband network using WiMAX technology in Armenia.

"We intend to launch the network this year and, therefore, be changed to the first and the largest wireless broadband Internet operator in Armenia," Comstar's president, Sergei Pridantsev, said in a statement.

The company said it had chosen Airspan Networks Inc (AIRN.O) to provide equipment for the base stations. It did not disclose the value of the deal.

Mobile WiMax is each emerging high-speed wireless standard which is expected to support access to liberal amounts of data, such as movies and multi-media content.

The firm expects to launch commercial service in the second half of this year. The network will cover 75 percent of Armenia's population, a Comstar spokeswoman said.

She declined to say how much Comstar would invest in the network deployment. Last year Comstar announced plans to invest "10s of millions of dollars" to build a WiMAX network in Moscow.

Comstar, part of Russian services conglomerate Sistema (SSAq.L), provides sound, data, Internet, pay-TV and other services.

(Reporting by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

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Egypt has only 40 pct Internet after cables break (Reuters)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt had less than half its Internet capacity available on Thursday because of breaks in two undersea cables that have also affected the Gulf region and south Asia.

The connections were disrupted off Egypt's northerly coast on Wednesday, slowing or stopping Internet access for users across faculties of Asia, and forcing service providers to reroute traffic.

Egyptian Telecommunications Minister Tarek Kamel said his country's Internet capacity would reach 45 to 50 percent by the end of the day.

"Capacity will be increased to 75 percent in 48 hours at the most through other cables and satellites," he added, at a signing ceremony for a new cable linking Egypt and France.

"Now nearly everyone is connected, but by different degrees. Only call centers still have serious problems."

He said it would take at least a week to fix the breaches, which are in segments of two intercontinental cables known as SEA-ME-WE-4 and FLAG.

India, home to three companies that have stakes in the cables, said in a statement: "It is expected that the links will be completely restored by the … operators within 10 days."

The International Cable Protection Committee, an association of 86 submarine cable operators dedicated to safeguarding submarine cables ( http://www.iscpc.org/ ), declined to speculate on the cause of the breaches.

"Investigations are still going on," a spokesman said.

Egypt said it did not know if weather had been a factor. Storms forced Egypt to close the northern entrance to the Suez Canal on Tuesday, making ships wait in the Mediterranean.

SUBMARINE NETWORK

The ICPC says more than 95 percent of transoceanic telecoms and data traffic are carried by subaquatic cables, and the rest by satellite. A single mate of optical fiber strands can now carry digitized information equivalent to 150 million simultaneous phone calls.

One of the biggest disruptions of modern telecoms systems was in December 2006, when a magnitude 7.1 earthquake broke nine submarine cables between Taiwan and the Philippines, cutting connections between southeast Asia and the rest of the world.

Internet links were thrown out in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Japan and the Philippines, disrupting the activities of banks, airlines and all kinds of email users.

Traffic was rerouted through other cables, but it took 49 days to restore full capacity.

While most cable operators say there is enough spare volume in the network, the ICPC has urged governments around the world to be greater amount of aware of its strategic and economic importance when deciding whether to issue permits with regard to the laying or repairing of cables in their waters.

In Cairo on Thursday, some residents said their Internet connections were working at slow speed, while others still had no workable access to the Web.

The digital blackout disrupted Egyptian financial market operations on Wednesday. Gulf Arab countries and India also reported significant disruptions to Internet connectivity.

Kamel said the $125 million submarine cable deal signed on Thursday by state-controlled Telecom Egypt and France's Alcatel-Lucent would boost network service in the most populous Arab country.

India's Bharti Airtel and VSNL are among the partners in the SEA-ME-WE-4 consortium, and Reliance Communications has a share in the FLAG cable.

(Additional reporting by Charlotte Cooper in Bombay and Georgina Prodhan in Frankfurt; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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Myanmar arrests blogger, watchdog says (AP)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

BANGKOK, Thailand - Myanmar’s junta has stepped up surveillance of the Internet, arresting undivided blogger who wrote about the stifling of free pressing out in the military-ruled nation, a media defence group said.

The blogger, Nay Myo Latt, was taken into custody in Yangon on Wednesday after writing about the suppression of freedoms following last fall’s crushing of pro-democracy demonstrations, Reporters Without Borders said.

Despite international condemnation and pressure following the demonstrations, there is little evidence that the junta is easing its repressive rule or moving closer to reconciliation with pro-democracy forces led by the agency of Suu Kyi.

The arrested blogger, a member of Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, owns three Internet cafes, Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said in a release seen Thursday.

Myanmar authorities have stepped up their surveillance of the Internet since the beginning of the month, pressuring Internet cafe owners to register personal details of all users and to program screen captures every five minutes on each computer, the release said.

This data apparently is sent to the Ministry of Communications, it said.

The but blog platform that had been accessible within Myanmar, the Google-owned Blogger, has been blocked by the regime since Jan. 23, preventing bloggers from posting entries unless they use proxies or other ways to provide around censorship, the group said.

“This blockage is one of the ways used by the control to reduce Burmese citizens to silence. Burma is in danger of being cut off from the rest of the world again,” the mention said.

Suu Kyi, who remains under house arrest, Wednesday warned the public to “hope for the best and prepare for the worst” in her country.

The democracy icon was allowed to meet with executives of her National League for Democracy party, who afterward voiced her unhappiness that in that place is not at all deadline for talks to bring near democratic reform.

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Russia’s heir apparent Medvedev puts up Web site (Reuters)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Dmitry Medvedev, named by Russian President Vladimir Putin last month of the same kind with his favored successor, launched his personal Internet situation on Wednesday.

In links on the homepage of www.medvedev2008.ru, the current first Deputy Prime Minister lists his major speeches, campaign team, news and a gallery of photographs showing the 42-year-old in action adhering the campaign trail.

His campaign program on the Web site is a copy of a January 22 speech in which he promised stability and continuity and promised to stay true to his mentor Putin's policies.

A full program is expected after official campaigning begins on Feb 2.

Photographs on the Web site show Medvedev standing behind Putin, leaning in to listen as Putin speaks across a dinner table, walking without a necktie next to Putin and standing alone while petting a bunny rabbit.

Russia votes to replace Putin, constitutionally prohibited from seeking a third designate, on March 2. Medvedev leads in all polls by an overwhelming majority and is expected to win outright in the first round.

"I'm glad to welcome you to my site. Here you will find materials I consider important. I hope they help you get a sense of my views," the presidential candidate writes.

State-owned pollster VTsIOM on Thursday predicted Medvedev will receive more than 70 per cent of the vote. His nearest adversary, Communist Gennady Zyuganov, comes in with 12.8.

For more on Russia's presidential election, please see our blog "Operation Successor" at http://blogs.reuters.com/russia.

(Reporting by Chris Baldwin, editing by Giles Elgood)

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Egypt asks to stop film, MP3 downloads during Internet outage (AFP)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

CAIRO (AFP) - Egypt's telecommunications ministry appealed Thursday for Internet users to stop downloading movies and MP3s so as to give priority to businesses after damage to an undersea cable forced all traffic onto backup systems.

The appeal came after two subaqueous cables in the Mediterranean were damaged for an unknown reason, causing disruption to Internet services in the Middle East and south Asia.

"Two of our cables are affected; everyone will go onto a third cable," ministry prolocutor Mohammed Taymur told AFP. "But that will not be enough bandwidth. The cable leave be overloaded and no one will be able to get access" unless people honour the ministry request.

"People should know how to use the Internet for the reason that people who download music and films are going to bear upon businesses who have more important things to do," he said.

Asked whether pornographic movies accounted for much Internet traffic to Egypt, Taymur said "That's another matter. Everyone downloads what they want. You can't forbid people from downloading sort or movies."

He said a company had been asked to repair the cables but that "for the time being we don't know the cause. The two cables are a kilometre (over half a mile) apart and we don't know what could have affected both at the corresponding; of like kind epoch."

Like India, Egypt has a major call centre industry which has been affected by the outage.

A ministry statement said call centres were barely able to function at 30 percent of their usual capacity.

"Of course the economy will be affected because of the reliance in succession Internet," Taymur said.

The statement said other Arab countries had been affected, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Qatar and Bahrain.

Taymur said some phone calls to Europe and the United States had been affected, while approximately 70 percent of Internet users were also affected."

India's vital outsourcing industry, which relies heavily on the Internet, was was also grappling with a major communications disruption Thursday after damage to the cables.

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Amazon expects sales to rise in 2008 (AP)

January 31st, 2008 | Category: privacy

SEATTLE - This year isn’t looking quite as sweet for Amazon.com shareholders as 2007.

Despite a possible recession in the U.S. economy, the Web retailer said it expects sales to rise briskly once more in 2008. But the gains won’t translate as readily to bottom-line growth.

“A lot of old Amazon bears are going to be growling,” said Tim Boyd, an analyst at American Technology Research.

At the open of commercial Thursdsay, shares fell 30 cents to $73.91.

Amazon revealed after the closing bell that its holiday-quarter profit more than doubled on revenue that jumped 42 percent. But while it forecast stellar sales growth in the coming year and executives shrugged off concerns about the economy, its operating income guidance fell laconic of the sort of Wall Street was expecting.

Boyd uttered international spending could carry Amazon through a slowdown in U.S. consumer spending. However, based on the company’s lackluster profit guidance, the analyst said Amazon appears poised to spend more and pocket less as it expands and fights off competition.

Some of the retailer’s cash may be spent fending off eBay Inc., a competitor for Amazon’s third-party seller business, Boyd said.

He also said Amazon’s digital music business may be losing money in this early appearance. Amazon would not say how its MP3 store performed financially.

In 2005 and 2006, investors and analysts were similarly unhappy with near-term results because Amazon exhausted heavily on technology and content. then spending slowed and margins rose last year, the dot-com returned to favor and shares climbed. Now, said Boyd, it seems Amazon has returned to investment mode.

Early Thursday, Amazon said it would buy the operator of online audiobook retailer Audible.com for $300 million, giving it access to more than 80,000 programs.

Amazon matched Wall Street’s expectations Wednesday when it reported its fourth-quarter profit more than doubled to $207 million, or 48 cents per share, from $98 the great body of the people, or 23 cents per share, in the same period last year.

Strong domestic and international sales in all categories drove revenue up 42 percent to $5.67 billion, topping analysts’ average prediction of $5.37 billion in revenue, according to a Thomson Financial poll.

Changes in foreign exchange rates lifted sales by $195 million.

“This company has just done an unbelievable job,” Boyd said. “They’re obviously just eating eBay’s lunch. They’re eating every one of their competitors’ lunches.”

Amazon’s gross margin was lower than in the year-ago quarter. In a discourse call, Chief Financial Officer Tom Szkutak said the company’s entrance into new product categories eats into profits. That’s because Amazon sells at competitive prices even before it has amassed the sales volume and business relationships necessary to command lower wholesale prices.

The retailer’s margins also take a hit as the calculate of people who discharge one’s obligation to up front for a year of free express shipping rises, as it did in 2007, and as the mix of products sold on the site shifts.

For all of 2007, Amazon said it earned $476 million, or $1.12 per share, a 150 percent increase over the previous year. Annual sales grew 39 percent to $14.84 billion.

The midpoint of Amazon’s operating profit outlook for the quarter and the year fell narrow of what Wall Street is currently looking for, even as sales forecasts topped analysts’ see.

since the current quarter, Amazon forecast between $3.95 billion and $4.15 billion in sales. For the full year, it predicted revenue of $18.75 billion to $19.75 billion.

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