Category: Web Services

Bellingham officials interested in Google high-speed Internet project

By visionwebsters | February 14, 2010

Bellingham Mayor Dan Pike has asked his staff to start discussions about applying to be a part of Google’s Fiber high-speed Internet project.

Google announced Wednesday, Feb. 10, that it is planning to build and test ultra high-speed broadband networks in a small number of trial locations across the United States.

The networks would deliver Internet speeds more than 100 times faster than the average U.S. Internet connection, according to Google’s announcement, and the service would be offered to between 50,000 and 500,000 people.

They’ve asked local government and the public to offer up proposals through March 26 to take part in the project.

“The first blush reaction was, well, first of all more speed is a better thing for the city because it helps us in terms of attracting economic development,” Pike said.

The project also has sparked the creation of a Facebook group – Bring Google Fiber for Communities to Bellingham – by residents excited for the city to seek the network.

Pike’s piqued interest is shared by new Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn, who announced Thursday, Feb. 11, that his administration would respond to Google’s request for proposals, too.

In Bellingham, any work toward a proposal is in the very early stages, said Information Technology Services Department Director Marty Mulholland.

The city must determine if the project is viable, she said, so staff will look at the status of the city’s infrastructure, use of utility poles, regulatory requirements, existing broadband in the community and more.

“We have many community attributes that seem to me to be positive in considering whether to take this on,” she said. “Our community size, presence of university, commitment to ‘green,’ presence of specific business types, active engaged citizens, and beautiful desirable community setting all seem to me to be positive factors.”

Popularity: 19% [?]

Google Transliteration IME to support 14 Indic languages

By visionwebsters | January 29, 2010

The search engine giant Google on Thursday released a desktop Transliteration IME, an Input Method Editor which aids users to type in 14 Indic languages using Roman keyboard accessible in online or offline mode. The service was previously available by the name Google Indic Transliteration as an online service.

Users can type words phonetically using Latin characters and the Google Transliteration IME would convert the word to its native script.

The Google Transliteration IME was developed at Indian R&D center in Bangalore which is available in 14 languages like Arabic, Bengali, Farsi (Persian), Greek, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu and Urdu.

For the time being, the IME engine is compatible with Windows 7/Vista/XP and can be downloaded for free. The tool also has features like personalized choices, word completion, quick search, easy-to-use keyboard and various other neccessary required options.

The IME enables businesses, students and teachers to author content and share views in their local languages and also helps users to use the feature with Gmail, Orkut, Blogger and Knol.

Popularity: 18% [?]

Chinese Human Rights Sites Hit by DDoS Attack

By visionwebsters | January 25, 2010

Five Web sites run by Chinese human rights activists were attacked by hackers over the weekend, as a separate row continued between Google and China over political cyberattacks.

The Web site of Chinese Human Rights Defenders, an advocacy group, was hit by a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that lasted 16 hours starting Saturday afternoon, the group said in an e-mailed statement on Monday. A DDoS attack involves the attacker ordering a legion of compromised computers all to visit a certain Web site at once, overwhelming its server with requests for communication and leaving the site inaccessible to normal visitors. The group said it could not confirm the origin of the attackers but called the Chinese government the most likely suspect.

Google this month said it had been hit by cyberattacks from China partly aimed at accessing the Gmail accounts of human rights activists. The company cited the attacks, which also resulted in the theft of Google intellectual property, as one reason it plans to stop censoring its Chinese search engine, even if that means closing down its China offices.

The latest hacking attack also targeted another Chinese rights group named Civil Rights and Livelihood Watch; two news sites run by Chinese activists, Canyu and New Century News; and the Independent Chinese Pen Center, which posts essays by dissident writers, according to the e-mailed statement. Public records show the Web sites all share two neighboring IP (Internet Protocol) addresses, suggesting the sites were all affected by the DDoS attack.

The bandwidth consumed by the attack hit 2GB per second at its peak, the statement said, citing the Internet service provider for the Web sites.

The targeted IP addresses belong to The Planet, a server hosting provider based in Texas. No one at The Planet was immediately available to comment.

Hackers also placed malware on two of the Web sites before the attack, but that is now being removed, the statement said. The group that sent out the statement has often been hit by cyberattacks, sometimes leaving its Web site down for days, it said.

An advocacy group for foreign journalists in China last week said the Gmail accounts of at least two reporters there had been recently hijacked.

Popularity: 25% [?]

Gartner Predicts Modest Overall Growth in IT Spending

By visionwebsters | January 21, 2010

Gartner has revised its outlook for worldwide IT spending this year, predicting the industry as a whole will see 4.6 percent growth to $3.4 trillion, up from its previous prediction of 3.3 percent growth, according to its latest figures released Thursday.

That figure contrasts with 2009, when spending fell 4.6 percent. Gartner revised its forecast upward to account for an expected weakening of the U.S. dollar.

Spending is also expected to increase due to the increasing confidence of CEOs and CFOs as economic conditions gradually improve, said Richard Gordon, a research vice president with Gartner, in avideo.

Emerging markets will see the strongest gains. Gartner predicts that spending will increase 9.3 percent in Latin America, 7.7 percent in the Middle East and Africa and 7 percent in the Asia-Pacific region.

Due to the recession, the U.S. is expected to post only 2.5 percent growth, with Japan just 1.8 percent. In a bright spot outside of emerging markets, Gartner expects Western Europe to come in at 5.2 percent growth.

On the consumer side, confidence appears to be more fragile, Gordon said. “We think consumers are a bit nervous about job prospects,” Gordon said.

The recovery from the recession will take between 12 to 18 months. The availability of credit should increase, which will help increase spending, and companies may look to make more hardware investments during the second half of this year, Gordon said.

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Bing to oust Google as default iPhone search?

By visionwebsters | January 20, 2010

Apple and Microsoft may be in talks to expel Google as the iPhone’s default search engine, in favor of Bing, according to BusinessWeek. The Apple-Google battle for the mobile throne is getting heated.

This is all coming from “two people familiar with the matter,” so, you know, eat a bowl of salt or whatever, but it sort of makes sense in a Machiavellian kind of way. Windows Mobile 7 notwithstanding, Apple’s competition in the mobile arena isn’t Microsoft, but Google, and so it’s not really that outlandish, especially considering that Bing isn’t necessarily a worse search engine than Google. Apple avoids throwing unnecessary support to Google (although the iPhone will still feature Google Maps, YouTube, and Gmail) while Microsoft gains a huge market for Bing. Everybody wins, except Google, which only mostly wins.

If Bing were the default search engine on your phone, would you go through the necessary steps to change it to Google? I have a feeling a lot of people just might not care. (Via BusinessWeek).

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2010 global IT spend to be flat: Gartner

By visionwebsters | January 19, 2010

The IT budgets will essentially be flat this year across the globe compared to last year when it declined by 8.1 per cent, says an industry survey.

According to a Gartner-EXP Worldwide Survey of global chief information officers (CIOs), the IT budgets are expected to witness a marginal increase in global average of 1.3 per cent compared to 2009, which saw the IT budgets declining by 8.1 per cent.

“The year 2009 was the most challenging for CIOs in the corporate and public sectors as they faced multiple budget cuts, delayed spending and increased demand for services with reduced resources,” Gartner EXP group vice-president and research head Mark McDonald said today, releasing the report.

This is set to change in 2010, as the economies recover from recession and enterprises transition their strategies from cost-cutting efficiency to value-creating productivity, he added.

The survey includes responses from 1,586 CIOs representing over USD 126 billion in corporate and public sector IT spends across 41 countries and 27 industries.

McDonald said while technologies are transitioning from ‘heavy’ owner-operated solutions to a ‘lighter-weight’ services model, the CIOs are, in turn, transitioning IT beyond merely managing resources to taking responsibility for managing results.

“The CIOs see 2010 as an opportunity to accelerate the transition of IT from a support function to strategic contributor focused on innovation and competitive advantage,” Gartner group vice-president McDonald said.

According to the survey, business process improvement and reducing enterprise costs are top two business priorities for the CIOs, while virtualisation and cloud-computing emerged as the top two technology priorities.

“These technologies, implemented properly, create the opportunity for IT to change its role and the operational performance of the enterprise,” McDonald said.

The data were collected in the fourth quarter of 2009 and provides a snapshot of the CIO plans, priorities and budgets for 2010 as they stood at the end of the fourth quarter of 2009, Gartner said.

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Twitter Punches Back at Facebook Connect

Twitter is launching tools to let third party Web sites more easily integrate Twitter features directly into their sites and services, in what some are calling “their response to the massively popular Facebook (News – Alert) Connect.”

That’s the opinion of industry observer Michael Arrington, who writes that “Facebook says 80,000 websites have added Facebook Connect, and 60 million Facebook users engage with Facebook connect on these third party sites each month.”

Baltimore Sun blogger Gus Sentementes notes that he “would be much more inclined to connect to a site via a ‘Twitter connect’ feature than Facebook Connect. I have far less personal information associated with my Twitter account than with my Facebook account… A lot of people want a way to connect with others without sharing private information with third parties.”

Facebook Connect was announced in May 2008, and Google (News – Alert) and MySpace quickly rushed out similar products.

Arrington says Facebook Connect is attractive to a lot of smaller sites “simply because it’s so easy to implement. They’ve created a number of widgets that bring Facebook features directly to third party sites, and integration is easy.”

Twitter is using an open, standards based approach with OAuth for authentication and data sharing, while Facebook uses proprietary protocols for Facebook Connect.

We can’t say we didn’t see this coming: Last April Ben Parr reported that Twitter “has quietly given some developers access to a new feature, Sign in with Twitter, which uses Twitter’s new OAuth technology to allow people to log into and access third party Web sites using their Twitter accounts. Sound familiar? On the surface, this has striking similarities to Facebook Connect.”

Industry observer Kit Eaton (News – Alert) writes that Facebook Connect is a juggernaut Twitter would do well to be wary of — “… it’s been so very successful it’s basically stamped out competing services from Google. And now there’s news that it’s hitting MySpace (News – Alert) — which is an even more potent demonstration of Connect’s power, since MySpace was a vicious Facebook rival in the early days, and it actually had its own competing service just two years ago.”

Eaton describes Twitter, “Facebook’s newest rival on the social network scene,” as determined to “get into the same sort of cross-Web site login business that Connect operates in.”

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Yahoo to bring Facebook, Twitter on Yahoo mail

Trying to make Yahoo Mail more interactive, give users a social experience and stay with the people they care about most, Yahoo plans to integrate with Facebook and Twitter by 2010 end.

Silicon India on Monday, quoted the Senior Vice President, Consumer Products, Yahoo, Bryan Lamkin, as saying that, “With the integration of Yahoo and Facebook, we can enable users to share meaningful content with their friends.”

Yahoo’s Facebook Connect integration will give consumers richer experiences on Yahoo!, including in Yahoo! Mail and on properties like Yahoo News, Yahoo Sports, and Yahoo Finance.

It would allow them to connect with Facebook friends on Yahoo, view a feed of their friends’ related activity on Yahoo, and share content – such as photos from Flickr or comments on news stories, with all of their friends on Facebook, Yahoo said, adding that the content that consumers share with Facebook friends would then create a loop that drives visitors back to Yahoo.

It is being speculated that the partnership will not only help Yahoo users, but would also allow Facebook users to access their stream and update their status from the Yahoo homepage, provides ‘Share on Facebook’ options across the Yahoo network, and allow Facebook to access Yahoo Contacts.

People who use Yahoo and Facebook, according to Yahoo, would soon be able to share updates across both networks, creating a richer and more relevant social experience by connecting the broad range of Yahoo content and services with their friends on Facebook.

Yahoo is also trying to make mail more secure, safe and personal by blocking 300 billion spam messages every month.

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Cyber Threats to Watch Out for in 2010

Security is a huge part of the job for most IT administrators. We’re always striving to protect our organizations from the latest barrage of viruses, worms, and other malware. With 2009 over, what types of threats could we face in the year ahead? The recent 2010 Threat Predictions report from McAfee (News – Alert) pegs a few different areas to watch out for in 2010.

Social networks will be one key breeding ground for cyber attacks, says McAfee. As sites like Twitter and Facebook (News – Alert) continue to grow in popularity, especially among the business crowd, cyber crooks will increasingly employ their usual bag of tricks to try to ensnare users.

A site like Facebook can be especially vulnerable as many people will implicitly and unthinkingly trust any “invitation” from their friends. But as McAfee points out, that next invite to play a cool game or run an interesting application from a Facebook friend could be a fake app created by a cybercriminal designed to infect your PC. We’ve already seen such malware attacking Facebook, such as the infamous Koobface worm that first reared its ugly head about a year ago.

Personally, I’ve just about stopped playing games, filling out quizzes, and running most applications in Facebook. I’ve never been comfortable with the way a Facebook app needs to gain access to your personal information in order to run. That’s always seemed like an open vulnerability that could easily allow the wrong people to learn too much about you. Now McAfee’s reminder that these apps are also a way to spread malware is something IT admins and Facebook users should keep in mind.

Another area to watch out for is the use of URL shorteners, popular on social networking and bookmarking sites. Services like bit.ly and tinyurl.com shorten URL strings so they can fit in smaller spaces, such as the 140-character limit imposed by Twitter. But you can’t preview a shortened URL, so you don’t know where it’s going to take you until the page pops up. This makes it easy for cyber crooks to point these URLs to pages that could deliver malware.

Microsoft (News – Alert) apps have traditionally been a popular target for malware writers. But that “honor” may switch over to Adobe this year. As Adobe Reader and Flash have become more prevalent, they’ve also become more of a target for cybercriminals. Adobe Reader in particular has been hit by security holes over the past year, forcing Adobe to take a more active role in keep its app properly patched.

Other threats that McAfee sees in its crystal ball for 2010:

Banking trojans designed to grab your financial account information may become more advanced. Already in 2009, they showed off the ability to sneak past some of the protections currently used by banks. McAfee warns that this year they may be able to silently interrupt transactions and even make withdrawals without being detected.

E-mail attachments will also continue to grow as a primary means of spreading malware. McAfee believes that these attachments could even target specific audiences, such as corporations, journalists – not good news on my end – and individuals.

Botnets, which are responsible for carrying out cyberattacks, will also increasingly use peer-to-peer networking to hop from one computer to another without a central base of operations. Such a strategy will make it more difficult for security professionals to track them down.

So how do you prepare yourself for the potential threats that lie ahead? Well, naturally since McAfee wrote the report, the company would like you to buy its own security software to protect your users. And McAfee does offer software with certain capabilities, such as the ability to scan shortened URLs. The company also recently struck a deal with Facebook to provide Facebook users with a free six-month subscription to its security software.

But any good security suite or application would be your first line of defense in protecting you and your users from the coming threats. It goes without saying that choosing and using the right software and keeping it updated is critical, no matter what security software you deploy. Also, make sure that you keep your organization’s PCs updated with the latest patches from Microsoft to protect the operating system, office suite, and browser.

But beyond the right software, user education is vital. Make sure your users are aware of the latest threats and realize that their actions can have consequences. They need to think twice before opening a file attachment or downloading an application that could expose them and your business to malware. Though 2010 may bring its own share of cyber threats like any other year, protecting your organization and your users is the best role you can play.

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Microsoft: Customers should upgrade from IE6 & IE7

By visionwebsters | January 18, 2010

Microsoft has urged its customers to upgrade to Internet Explorer 8, with the software giant’s engineers not finding a solution to the now infamous exploit that was publicised by Google.

Part of Google’s crisis of conscience on China arrived because of a sophisticated attack on some Chinese citizens using an exploit in IE.

Microsoft insisted at the time that the attacks were made on people using the execrable IE6 browser, and, as of Sunday, Microsoft was issuing urgent releases to its customers urging them to upgrade to IE8.

IE8 untouched

“Customers using Internet Explorer 8 are not affected by currently known attacks and exploits due to the improved security protections in IE8,” said Microsoft.

“To help protect our customers, we recommend that all customers immediately upgrade to Internet Explorer 8.

“Customers should also consider applying the workarounds and mitigations provided in our Security Advisory such as putting Internet zone security settings to High.”

IE6 dead

Microsoft has always insisted that it will support those still on IE6, including businesses that it suggests have tools that rely on using the ageing and much criticised browser.

However, it is clear that IE6 is not coping with the modern internet, and, once again, a major scare has prompted the need for a call to update.

“Microsoft teams are continuing to work around the clock on an update and we will take appropriate action to protect customers when the update has met the quality bar for broad distribution,” concludes Microsoft’s release.

“Obviously, it is unfortunate that our product is being used in the pursuit of criminal activity.

“We will continue to work with Google, industry leaders and the appropriate authorities to investigate this situation.”

So, if you have IE6 or IE7 then look for a modern browser – which include ones not made by Microsoft of course.

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