Monday 30 November 2009

New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe


Malware is getting more and more sophisticated. Bent on destruction, it is seemingly immune to modern weapons. One such Trojan horse program is very sophisticated and it keeps reinventing itself in its greedy quest to empty bank accounts.
trojan horse New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
The URLzone Trojan, which was recently discovered by Finjan Software, is highly advanced and proof positive that the bad guys are keeping up with technology as well as the good guys (if not being a step ahead, sad to say). This strain of malware rewrites bank pages; victims do not know that their accounts have been tampered with and emptied in many cases. Its interface is sophisticated and diabolical as it’s command-and-control feature allows the bad guys pre-set the percentage of the account balance they wish to clear out!
URLzone is a formidable adversary.. RSA researchers claim that this malware utilizes several techniques to discover those machines that have been set up by investigators and law enforcement, and so far, they have been impossible to fool.RSA Security was founded by and named after the inventors of public key cryptography: Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adelman. According to Aviv Raff, RSA’s Fraud Action research lab manager:
“We typically create programs that are designed to mimic the behavior of real Trojans. When URLzone identifies one of these, it sends it bogus information. Security experts have long published research into the inner workings of malicious computer programs such as URLzone…Now the other side knows that they are being watched and they’re acting.”
trojanhorse2 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
URLzone is merciless when it discovers a program established by the “good guys.” Some malware might be content to simply disconnect, but not URLzone. The server forces money transfers, but not by one of their own people recruited to move cash overseas. They choose an innocent victim; someone who has received legitimate money transfers from other hacked computers on the network. To date, more than 400 legitimate accounts have been manipulated in this manner.
The idea is to confuse researchers and to prevent the criminal’s real money mules from being discovered. Although banking Trojans are not new and have been responsible for the loss of many accounts of innocent people, the URLzone represents the first of a frightening and smarter generation of malware. To date, according to police dog, Finjan, this banking Trojan infected as many as 6,400 computers last month alone and was clearing a hefty $17,500 per day!
trojan horse3 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
One can only wonder if Andrew Jackson wasn’t right after all.
It has been said that Old Hickory didn’t trust banks. If your money isn’t safe there, where can it ever be?

Source : http://amog.com/

New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe


Malware is getting more and more sophisticated. Bent on destruction, it is seemingly immune to modern weapons. One such Trojan horse program is very sophisticated and it keeps reinventing itself in its greedy quest to empty bank accounts.
trojan horse New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
The URLzone Trojan, which was recently discovered by Finjan Software, is highly advanced and proof positive that the bad guys are keeping up with technology as well as the good guys (if not being a step ahead, sad to say). This strain of malware rewrites bank pages; victims do not know that their accounts have been tampered with and emptied in many cases. Its interface is sophisticated and diabolical as it’s command-and-control feature allows the bad guys pre-set the percentage of the account balance they wish to clear out!
URLzone is a formidable adversary.. RSA researchers claim that this malware utilizes several techniques to discover those machines that have been set up by investigators and law enforcement, and so far, they have been impossible to fool.RSA Security was founded by and named after the inventors of public key cryptography: Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adelman. According to Aviv Raff, RSA’s Fraud Action research lab manager:
“We typically create programs that are designed to mimic the behavior of real Trojans. When URLzone identifies one of these, it sends it bogus information. Security experts have long published research into the inner workings of malicious computer programs such as URLzone…Now the other side knows that they are being watched and they’re acting.”
trojanhorse2 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
URLzone is merciless when it discovers a program established by the “good guys.” Some malware might be content to simply disconnect, but not URLzone. The server forces money transfers, but not by one of their own people recruited to move cash overseas. They choose an innocent victim; someone who has received legitimate money transfers from other hacked computers on the network. To date, more than 400 legitimate accounts have been manipulated in this manner.
The idea is to confuse researchers and to prevent the criminal’s real money mules from being discovered. Although banking Trojans are not new and have been responsible for the loss of many accounts of innocent people, the URLzone represents the first of a frightening and smarter generation of malware. To date, according to police dog, Finjan, this banking Trojan infected as many as 6,400 computers last month alone and was clearing a hefty $17,500 per day!
trojan horse3 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
One can only wonder if Andrew Jackson wasn’t right after all.
It has been said that Old Hickory didn’t trust banks. If your money isn’t safe there, where can it ever be?

Source : http://amog.com/

New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe


Malware is getting more and more sophisticated. Bent on destruction, it is seemingly immune to modern weapons. One such Trojan horse program is very sophisticated and it keeps reinventing itself in its greedy quest to empty bank accounts.
trojan horse New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
The URLzone Trojan, which was recently discovered by Finjan Software, is highly advanced and proof positive that the bad guys are keeping up with technology as well as the good guys (if not being a step ahead, sad to say). This strain of malware rewrites bank pages; victims do not know that their accounts have been tampered with and emptied in many cases. Its interface is sophisticated and diabolical as it’s command-and-control feature allows the bad guys pre-set the percentage of the account balance they wish to clear out!
URLzone is a formidable adversary.. RSA researchers claim that this malware utilizes several techniques to discover those machines that have been set up by investigators and law enforcement, and so far, they have been impossible to fool.RSA Security was founded by and named after the inventors of public key cryptography: Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adelman. According to Aviv Raff, RSA’s Fraud Action research lab manager:
“We typically create programs that are designed to mimic the behavior of real Trojans. When URLzone identifies one of these, it sends it bogus information. Security experts have long published research into the inner workings of malicious computer programs such as URLzone…Now the other side knows that they are being watched and they’re acting.”
trojanhorse2 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
URLzone is merciless when it discovers a program established by the “good guys.” Some malware might be content to simply disconnect, but not URLzone. The server forces money transfers, but not by one of their own people recruited to move cash overseas. They choose an innocent victim; someone who has received legitimate money transfers from other hacked computers on the network. To date, more than 400 legitimate accounts have been manipulated in this manner.
The idea is to confuse researchers and to prevent the criminal’s real money mules from being discovered. Although banking Trojans are not new and have been responsible for the loss of many accounts of innocent people, the URLzone represents the first of a frightening and smarter generation of malware. To date, according to police dog, Finjan, this banking Trojan infected as many as 6,400 computers last month alone and was clearing a hefty $17,500 per day!
trojan horse3 New Banking Trojan: A Nasty And Formidable Foe
One can only wonder if Andrew Jackson wasn’t right after all.
It has been said that Old Hickory didn’t trust banks. If your money isn’t safe there, where can it ever be?

Source : http://amog.com/

Tuesday 24 November 2009

The Momentum Toward LTE Accelerates

The LTE trial and test phase is white hot.

Driven by the increase in demand cause by fixed-rate data plans coupled with the popularity of the iPhone and other advanced devices, the pace of testing of one of the two flavors of 4G technology, Long Term Evolution (LTE), is accelerating.

LTE is particularly active on the international front. ABI Research says that as of the end of September, 100 mobile networks were holding trials or were set to start. More than 40 of the trials are ongoing in the Asia-Pacific region – led by Japan and South Korea, with 33 contracts awarded. ABI Research says that though the first networks won’t start commercial operation until the end of next year, a robust 32.6 million subscribers will be served by LTE by 2013. The pressure is so great that many operators are taking the interim step of upgrading 3G networks to High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) status.


A snapshot of the ongoing trials shows how active the landscape is. For instance, Telecom Italia is conducting trials in conjunction with Huawei in Turin, Italy. Singtel is planning trials in Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore. China Mobile said that it established a trial at the Shanghai World Expo Park and will launch what it says is the first Time Division Duplex (TD-LTE) trial next year, while Motorola claimed that it is the first vendor to complete and pass TD-LTE testing with China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

That’s not all. This VON story says Nokia Siemens Networks and Telefonica are set for a six-month trial in the Czech Republic, and Huawei has been selected to integrate three different types of networks – GSM, HSPA and LTE, when it arrives – for Belgaom. Siemens Networks and LG Electronics have finished what Telecoms Korea says is the first end-to-end interoperability test in the 2100 MHz frequency band. The test used Nokia Siemens LTE equipment and LG’s LTE USB data card.

There certainly are more tests and trials ongoing or soon to launch. The significant head start of WiMax, the other 4G platform, clearly hasn’t stopped an almost frenetic level of activity from the LTE camp. This, of course, is good news for vendors, service providers and customers across the board.

The Momentum Toward LTE Accelerates

The LTE trial and test phase is white hot.

Driven by the increase in demand cause by fixed-rate data plans coupled with the popularity of the iPhone and other advanced devices, the pace of testing of one of the two flavors of 4G technology, Long Term Evolution (LTE), is accelerating.

LTE is particularly active on the international front. ABI Research says that as of the end of September, 100 mobile networks were holding trials or were set to start. More than 40 of the trials are ongoing in the Asia-Pacific region – led by Japan and South Korea, with 33 contracts awarded. ABI Research says that though the first networks won’t start commercial operation until the end of next year, a robust 32.6 million subscribers will be served by LTE by 2013. The pressure is so great that many operators are taking the interim step of upgrading 3G networks to High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) status.


A snapshot of the ongoing trials shows how active the landscape is. For instance, Telecom Italia is conducting trials in conjunction with Huawei in Turin, Italy. Singtel is planning trials in Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore. China Mobile said that it established a trial at the Shanghai World Expo Park and will launch what it says is the first Time Division Duplex (TD-LTE) trial next year, while Motorola claimed that it is the first vendor to complete and pass TD-LTE testing with China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

That’s not all. This VON story says Nokia Siemens Networks and Telefonica are set for a six-month trial in the Czech Republic, and Huawei has been selected to integrate three different types of networks – GSM, HSPA and LTE, when it arrives – for Belgaom. Siemens Networks and LG Electronics have finished what Telecoms Korea says is the first end-to-end interoperability test in the 2100 MHz frequency band. The test used Nokia Siemens LTE equipment and LG’s LTE USB data card.

There certainly are more tests and trials ongoing or soon to launch. The significant head start of WiMax, the other 4G platform, clearly hasn’t stopped an almost frenetic level of activity from the LTE camp. This, of course, is good news for vendors, service providers and customers across the board.

The Momentum Toward LTE Accelerates

The LTE trial and test phase is white hot.

Driven by the increase in demand cause by fixed-rate data plans coupled with the popularity of the iPhone and other advanced devices, the pace of testing of one of the two flavors of 4G technology, Long Term Evolution (LTE), is accelerating.

LTE is particularly active on the international front. ABI Research says that as of the end of September, 100 mobile networks were holding trials or were set to start. More than 40 of the trials are ongoing in the Asia-Pacific region – led by Japan and South Korea, with 33 contracts awarded. ABI Research says that though the first networks won’t start commercial operation until the end of next year, a robust 32.6 million subscribers will be served by LTE by 2013. The pressure is so great that many operators are taking the interim step of upgrading 3G networks to High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) status.


A snapshot of the ongoing trials shows how active the landscape is. For instance, Telecom Italia is conducting trials in conjunction with Huawei in Turin, Italy. Singtel is planning trials in Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore. China Mobile said that it established a trial at the Shanghai World Expo Park and will launch what it says is the first Time Division Duplex (TD-LTE) trial next year, while Motorola claimed that it is the first vendor to complete and pass TD-LTE testing with China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

That’s not all. This VON story says Nokia Siemens Networks and Telefonica are set for a six-month trial in the Czech Republic, and Huawei has been selected to integrate three different types of networks – GSM, HSPA and LTE, when it arrives – for Belgaom. Siemens Networks and LG Electronics have finished what Telecoms Korea says is the first end-to-end interoperability test in the 2100 MHz frequency band. The test used Nokia Siemens LTE equipment and LG’s LTE USB data card.

There certainly are more tests and trials ongoing or soon to launch. The significant head start of WiMax, the other 4G platform, clearly hasn’t stopped an almost frenetic level of activity from the LTE camp. This, of course, is good news for vendors, service providers and customers across the board.

Monday 23 November 2009

Facebook Review: A tool for cops and robbers

In Venezuela criminals use Facebook to research targets. Cops use it too — but not always for scrupulous purposes.


CARACAS, Venezuela — It has taken Venezuela by storm, but it seems that Facebook and other social networking sites also come with their perils.
Police here revealed that a pair of students at a private university in Caracas had been robbing their virtual friends’ homes using information they had compiled using Facebook.
Police raided the apartment of one of two students who, working in tandem with another couple, had been using Facebook to befriend classmates. They then used the information their new “friends” posted on their profiles to find out where they lived, what they owned and when they were not at home.
"They observe the families’ movements, they study the residencies — the comings and goings, the security measures," said Wilmer Flores Trosel, director of the CICPC, Venezuela’s eqivalent of the FBI.
Security analysts in Venezuela say it is becoming increasingly frequent for criminals to use social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Sonico and Hi5 as a source of information for house robberies, fraud and kidnappings.
And it's not just the criminals capitalizing on this online data source, the police too are using it, to go after both hard-core criminals and political protesters. In a country with little tolerance for dissent, many fear the government has designs on controlling these sites. And the crimes aided by Facebook, might give them cause to do just that. [more]
Source : globalpost.com

Facebook Review: A tool for cops and robbers

In Venezuela criminals use Facebook to research targets. Cops use it too — but not always for scrupulous purposes.


CARACAS, Venezuela — It has taken Venezuela by storm, but it seems that Facebook and other social networking sites also come with their perils.
Police here revealed that a pair of students at a private university in Caracas had been robbing their virtual friends’ homes using information they had compiled using Facebook.
Police raided the apartment of one of two students who, working in tandem with another couple, had been using Facebook to befriend classmates. They then used the information their new “friends” posted on their profiles to find out where they lived, what they owned and when they were not at home.
"They observe the families’ movements, they study the residencies — the comings and goings, the security measures," said Wilmer Flores Trosel, director of the CICPC, Venezuela’s eqivalent of the FBI.
Security analysts in Venezuela say it is becoming increasingly frequent for criminals to use social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Sonico and Hi5 as a source of information for house robberies, fraud and kidnappings.
And it's not just the criminals capitalizing on this online data source, the police too are using it, to go after both hard-core criminals and political protesters. In a country with little tolerance for dissent, many fear the government has designs on controlling these sites. And the crimes aided by Facebook, might give them cause to do just that. [more]
Source : globalpost.com

Facebook Review: A tool for cops and robbers

In Venezuela criminals use Facebook to research targets. Cops use it too — but not always for scrupulous purposes.


CARACAS, Venezuela — It has taken Venezuela by storm, but it seems that Facebook and other social networking sites also come with their perils.
Police here revealed that a pair of students at a private university in Caracas had been robbing their virtual friends’ homes using information they had compiled using Facebook.
Police raided the apartment of one of two students who, working in tandem with another couple, had been using Facebook to befriend classmates. They then used the information their new “friends” posted on their profiles to find out where they lived, what they owned and when they were not at home.
"They observe the families’ movements, they study the residencies — the comings and goings, the security measures," said Wilmer Flores Trosel, director of the CICPC, Venezuela’s eqivalent of the FBI.
Security analysts in Venezuela say it is becoming increasingly frequent for criminals to use social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Sonico and Hi5 as a source of information for house robberies, fraud and kidnappings.
And it's not just the criminals capitalizing on this online data source, the police too are using it, to go after both hard-core criminals and political protesters. In a country with little tolerance for dissent, many fear the government has designs on controlling these sites. And the crimes aided by Facebook, might give them cause to do just that. [more]
Source : globalpost.com

Saturday 21 November 2009

How to hide your Facebook friends list



Facebook last Wednesday announced new privacy settings that give users some additional control over what information they share, while taking away the ability to hide a few pieces of information from the general public.

One particular piece of publicly available information--users' friends lists--caused a bit of an uproar from a number of sectors, including business people who don't necessarily want to expose their professional networks to the public and their competitors. It is also a concern to some parents who might not want their kids--or a list of their kids' friends--to be widely available.

Facebook quickly backtracked. A day later, the company announced on its blog that users can now uncheck the "Show my friends on my profile" option in the Friends box on their profile so that your friend list won't appear on your publicly viewable profile.

Unfortunately, they weren't very clear on exactly how you make the change. You won't find this checkbox in your Facebook privacy settings. Instead you have to follow these steps:

1. Click on Profile on the blue bar a the top of the screen:
2. Scroll down to the beginning of your Friends list and click on the pencil to the right of the word Friends:

3. Uncheck the box that says "Show Friend list to everyone":

You can't hide your friends from your friends and applications
Unchecking that box will hide your friends list when a non-Facebook friend views your public profile, but it will not hide your Facebook friends list from your friends when they look at your profile. Also, this information will be available to applications and application developers.

In addition, this procedure does not hide other publicly available information including your name, profile picture, gender, current city, networks you belong to, and pages you're a fan of.

Double-check your privacy settings
Most Facebook users have by now gone through the mandatory privacy settings wizard, but you can revisit your settings at any time by hovering over settings in the tool bar on the top of the screen and selecting privacy settings. If you don't do this, a fair amount of your information might be available to the public including the names of your kids and other family members (with links to their Facebook accounts), your relationship status, and where you work.


To find out how your Facebook profile looks to the public, click on Profile Information in privacy settings and then on Preview My Profile...on the upper right section of that page.



How to hide your Facebook friends list



Facebook last Wednesday announced new privacy settings that give users some additional control over what information they share, while taking away the ability to hide a few pieces of information from the general public.

One particular piece of publicly available information--users' friends lists--caused a bit of an uproar from a number of sectors, including business people who don't necessarily want to expose their professional networks to the public and their competitors. It is also a concern to some parents who might not want their kids--or a list of their kids' friends--to be widely available.

Facebook quickly backtracked. A day later, the company announced on its blog that users can now uncheck the "Show my friends on my profile" option in the Friends box on their profile so that your friend list won't appear on your publicly viewable profile.

Unfortunately, they weren't very clear on exactly how you make the change. You won't find this checkbox in your Facebook privacy settings. Instead you have to follow these steps:

1. Click on Profile on the blue bar a the top of the screen:
2. Scroll down to the beginning of your Friends list and click on the pencil to the right of the word Friends:

3. Uncheck the box that says "Show Friend list to everyone":

You can't hide your friends from your friends and applications
Unchecking that box will hide your friends list when a non-Facebook friend views your public profile, but it will not hide your Facebook friends list from your friends when they look at your profile. Also, this information will be available to applications and application developers.

In addition, this procedure does not hide other publicly available information including your name, profile picture, gender, current city, networks you belong to, and pages you're a fan of.

Double-check your privacy settings
Most Facebook users have by now gone through the mandatory privacy settings wizard, but you can revisit your settings at any time by hovering over settings in the tool bar on the top of the screen and selecting privacy settings. If you don't do this, a fair amount of your information might be available to the public including the names of your kids and other family members (with links to their Facebook accounts), your relationship status, and where you work.


To find out how your Facebook profile looks to the public, click on Profile Information in privacy settings and then on Preview My Profile...on the upper right section of that page.