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Category Archives for "Network World Wireless"

38% off Nonda USB-C to USB 3.0 Mini Adapter – Deal Alert

This is an essential adapter if you need to connect your standard USB devices to the newer USB-C style connector found on the new Macbooks, Chromebooks and others. This one from Nonda is super small and fast, capable of data transfer speeds of up to 5Gbps with USB 3.0. The adapter averages 4.5 out of 5 stars from reviewers on Amazon (read reviews) and its typical list price of $15.99 has been reduced to $9.99. See it now on Amazon.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Google Early Access program: A safe place to develop Android apps

The first version of a new mobile app is often like the first pancake. It tastes good, but looks less than perfect and gets pushed aside at the breakfast table. Launching a new app on the Play Store with its millions of apps and over a billion regular visitors can be like this for a new company with a new app.+ Also on Network World: How to break into Android development + Compounding the problem is the average Play Store user is often less than tolerant of beta versions of software, quickly installing and removing the app and leaving little more than a record that the app with removed within a few seconds. And some leave bad feedback, dissuading more tolerant users from installing the software.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

DDoS attacks from webcams, routers hit Singapore’s StarHub

Following Friday's massive internet disruption in the U.S., a Singapore-based broadband provider reports it faced two distributed denial-of-service attacks, forcing users offline.The attacks, which occurred Saturday and then on Monday, targeted Singapore's StarHub, briefly cutting internet access for the company's home broadband subscribers before services were restored."These two recent attacks that we experienced were unprecedented in scale, nature and complexity," StarHub said in a Facebook posting on Wednesday.In addition, the company has reportedly said that malware-infected broadband routers and webcams were involved in the two attacks, producing a spike in internet traffic that overwhelmed the company's services.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

The gender gap in tech is getting worse but it’s fixable

With all the recent attention paid to the IT skills gap and the need for more women and underrepresented minorities in technology, you'd think that the IT industry would have innovative solutions, programs and processes in place to fix it. You'd be wrong.New research from global professional services company Accenture and not-for-profit organization Girls Who Code, unveiled at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, held in Houston last week, that despite heightened awareness of the problem, without interventions, strategic planning and targeted tactics, the share of women in the U.S. computing workforce will decline from the current rate of 24 percent to 22 percent by 2025.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Emergency Flash Player patch fixes zero-day critical flaw

Adobe Systems has released an emergency patch for Flash Player in order to fix a critical vulnerability that attackers are already taking advantage of.The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2016-7855 in the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures database, is a use-after-free error that could lead to arbitrary code execution."Adobe is aware of a report that an exploit for CVE-2016-7855 exists in the wild, and is being used in limited, targeted attacks against users running Windows versions 7, 8.1 and 10," the company warned in a security advisory Wednesday.Users are advised to upgrade to Flash Player 23.0.0.205 on Windows and Mac and to version 11.2.202.643 on Linux. The Flash Player runtime bundled with Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge or Internet Explorer 11 on Windows 10 and 8.1 will be updated automatically through those browsers' update mechanisms.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Raspberry Pi Roundup: Watching for the meter-reader, driving Lego cars and sweet art

Being a person that lives in San Francisco, we’re reliably informed, is one of the best ways to spend lots of money, while simultaneously competing with other persons for very limited living space. The situation is much the same for cars, apparently, because one clever San Franciscan developed a Raspberry Pi-based gadget to help him hold onto parking spaces for as long as possible.The resident parking spaces near developer John Naulty’s home in the Castro have a two-hour limit, but he realized that those two hours didn’t start until San Francisco’s parking enforcement interceptors – distinctive little vehicles that monitor parked cars – drove past and noted his position.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Attackers are now abusing exposed LDAP servers to amplify DDoS attacks

Attackers are abusing yet another widely used protocol in order to amplify distributed denial-of-service attacks: the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), which is used for directory services on corporate networks.DDoS mitigation provider Corero Network Security has recently observed an attack against its customers that was reflected and amplified through Connectionless LDAP (CLDAP), a variant of LDAP that uses the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) for transport.DDoS reflection is the practice of sending requests using a spoofed source IP address to various servers on the Internet, which will then direct their responses to that address instead of the real sender. The spoofed IP address is that of the intended victim.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

What’s the one thing Amazon will not manufacture? Guns

Amazon Web Services CEO Andy Jassy made some bold claims about the cloud computing market during a Q&A with the Wall Street Journal this week and left open the possibility for Amazon to enter almost any new market, except for one.In response to a question about if there’s anything Amazon would not make, Jassy reportedly responded: “Manufacturing guns.”+MORE AT NETWORK WORLD: What's behind Amazon, Microsoft and Google's aggressive cloud expansions? Check out our interactive map to find out +To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

FBI snags group that allegedly pinched 23,000 or $6.7 million worth of iPhones

The FBI today said it had arrested a group of men in connection with the theft of 23,000 Apple iPhones from a cargo area at the Miami International Airport in April.The stolen iPhones were worth approximately $6.7 million and the arrests of Yoan Perez, 33; Rodolfo Urra, 36; Misael Cabrera, 37; Rasiel Perez, 45; and Eloy Garcia, 42 were all made at the suspect’s residences throughout Miami Dade County, the FBI said. These subjects are in federal custody and are facing federal charges. Their initial appearances are expected to be in federal court in Miami.+More on Network World: US Senator wants to know why IoT security is so anemic+To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

The PDF format finally reaches 2.0 release

Twenty-three years after Adobe Systems introduced the Portable Document Format (PDF), the format is finally getting a significant makeover. The new release will be available some time next year. So, what can expect after all this time? PDF was designed as a way to make formatted documents, such as contracts, available as electronic images without requiring them to be printed. What started as merely a static image when introduced in 1993 has grown into an industry standard that is modifyable, so people can PDF-fill forms on their computers, and capable of being generated by a wide variety of applications.A BPI Network report called "Dealing With Document Deluge and Danger" (available as a PDF, of course) states some 2.5 trillion PDFs are generated every year, and about 90 percent of survey respondents describe themselves and their co-workers as "PDF-dependent." So, PDF has become integral in the lives of many people and businesses. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Samy Kamkar hacks IoT security camera to show exploitable dangers to enterprise

ForeScout Technologies released an “IoT Enterprise Risk Report” (pdf) which identified seven IoT devices that can be hacked in as little as three minutes: IP-connected security systems, smart HVACs and energy meters, VoIP phones, connected printers, video conferencing systems, smart light bulbs and smart refrigerators. Although the hack might only take a few minutes to pull off, it might take weeks to find and fix.Other “key findings” of the report include: Should any of these devices become infected, hackers can plant backdoors to create and launch an automated IoT botnet DDoS attack. Cybercriminals can leverage jamming or spoofing techniques to hack smart enterprise security systems, enabling them to control motion sensors, locks and surveillance equipment. With VoIP phones, exploiting configuration settings to evade authentication can open opportunities for snooping and recording of calls. Via connected HVAC systems and energy meters, hackers can force critical rooms (e.g. server rooms) to overheat critical infrastructure and ultimately cause physical damage. Potential scenarios for after an IoT device is hacked include using compromised smart video conferencing systems for spying via camera and microphone, disabling security cameras to allow physical break-ins, snooping on calls via VoIP phones and snagging private company Continue reading

Cybersecurity Isn’t Always a “Boardroom Issue”

We’ve all heard or read the rhetoric that “cybersecurity has become a boardroom issue.”  I certainly agree that we are trending in this direction but is this true today or nothing more than marketing hype?ESG recently published a new research report in collaboration with the Information Systems Security Association (ISSA) titled, The State of Cyber Security Professional Careers, to ask a number of questions and truly capture the voice of cybersecurity professionals. As part of this project, cybersecurity professionals were asked if their CISO’s (or similar role) participation with executive management (i.e. CEO, board of directors, etc.) was at an adequate level.  Just over (56%) half answered “yes,” but 16% thought the level of CISO participation with executive management should increase somewhat while another 12% believe that the CISO’s level of participation with executive management should increase significantly.  The remaining 16% responded, “don’t know” (note: I am an ESG employee).   To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

39% off Behringer Xenyx 802 Premium 8-Input 2-Bus Mixer, for Podcasting or Musicians – Deal Alert

This premium 8 input 2 bus mixer lets you mix multiple audio sources in real time, and output them to you computer, making it ideal for podcasting, live music, and more. Take your podcast to the next level by taking calls over Skype. Studio grade compressors let you mix vocals and instrumentals with professional grade sound. Good for a live show at a coffee shop, a kareoke party, even a simple public announcement and everything in between. The combinations are endless and the built-in studio-grade, phantom-powered XENYX Mic Preamps and ultra-musical “British” channel EQ will make even the simplest setup sound great. Comes with free audio recording, editing and podcasting software plus 150 instrument/effect plug-ins downloadable. This #1 Amazon best seller averages 4.5 out of 5 stars from over 600 people (read reviews) and its list price of $97.99 is currently discounted 39% to just $59.81. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Google Fiber puts expansion plans on hold to review strategy

Google Fiber has paused plans to roll out fiber optic cables across a number of U.S. cities, as the company reevaluates its strategy to presumably use mainly wireless to provide high-speed Internet service.Work on Google Fiber is to continue in in the cities where it has been launched or is under construction, wrote Craig Barratt, senior vice president at Alphabet and CEO of its Access unit, of which Google Fiber is a part. In the “potential Fiber cities” where  Google Fiber was still at the stage of exploratory discussions, the project will pause operations.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

10 things Apple’s new Macs could (and should) copy from the PC

What will the next Macs have? Ask a PC Image by Gordon Mah UngAt long last, Apple is expected to unveil new MacBooks and possibly other Mac hardware on Thursday. The usual rumors fly ahead of the event, hinting at everything from long-overdue internal updates to innovative OLED touch strips.To find out just what Apple could (and should) introduce, however, all I had to do was look at what PC makers have already been shipping for months. Who knows—maybe Apple did the same thing. As we eagerly await the coming of the new Macs, check out the features we hope Apple ripped off from PC makers.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

MySQL face-off: Amazon outscales Google

Many web applications have been built on an open source stack that included MySQL. Despite its limitations, MySQL managed to become the world’s most widely used open source RDBMS. What limitations, you ask? Out of the box, MySQL does not scale all that well and, in particular, cannot handle a lot of simultaneous clients compared to commercial databases.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here(Insider Story)

Flash mobs the latest threat this holiday season

The holiday season rings in more than just higher sales for retailers. There's also more shoplifting and lower profit margins than the rest of the year, according to a report released today. Plus, this year, there's an extra surprise -- flash mobs.Not the dancing, music-playing, watching-a-couple-get-engaged kind of flash mobs. But the kind of flash mobs where a bunch of people all show up at a store at once, pull hats low over their heads, grab everything in sight, and split.Just last week, there was a flash mob at an Apple store in Natick, Mass., that took off with more than $13,000 worth of iPhones in less than a minute.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Russian criminals’ bank attacks go global

Russian cybercriminals have field tested their attack techniques on local banks, and have now begun taking them global, according to a new report -- and a new breed of mobile attack apps is coming up next.Criminals stole nearly $44 million directly from Russian banks in the last half of 2015 and the first half of 2016, according to Dmitiry Volkov, co-founder and head of threat intelligence at Moscow-based Group-IB.That was up 292 percent from the same period a year earlier. Direct, targeted attacks against banks now account for 45 percent of all bank-related cybercrime in Russia.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Cyber after Snowden

Since Edward Snowden leaked classified information from the National Security Agency (NSA) in 2013, the FBI and Apple had a public battle around privacy, Shadow Brokers leaked some of the NSA's hacking tools, and Hal Martin, an ex-NSA contractor was arrested for stealing classified information.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here