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Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Google Acquires Reverse Engineering Company Zynamics.


Google has just acquired a small German software company called Zynamics. The company, which was founded in 2004, focuses on reverse engineering -- that is, analyzing software (malware in particular) for which no source code is available.
It's an incredibly interesting and complicated problem to try to solve, which makes the Zynamics team and product a perfect fit for Google, a company that's known for tackling interesting and complicated problems.
A Google rep said in an e-mail, "We’re delighted to have the Zynamics team aboard and hope their tools and skills in fighting malware will help us better protect Google’s users."
While we're not completely sure what the fate of the company will be, we do know that its goals and expertise line up particularly well with Google's aims in online security.
Currently, Zynamics's offerings focus on the needs of information security specialists and malware analysts. Its products are allegedly both innovative and time-saving.
The company's products include BinDiff, for analyzing executables; BinNavi, for analyzing binary code; PDF Dissector, for analyzing PDF malware; VxClass, for sorting malware into families; and BinCrowd, which is a central database for sharing reverse-engineered information.
In addition to these products, Google is also acquiring a brilliant and experienced team -- just the kind of engineers Google is renowned for hiring.
We'll see what the future holds for Zynamics, and we'll keep you updated as details about this deal emerge.

Read More :- Zynamics Reverse Engineering

Google Pulls 21 Apps In Android Malware Scare.


Google has just pulled 21 popular free apps from the Android Market. According to the company, the apps are malware aimed at getting root access to the user's device, gathering a wide range of available data, and downloading more code to it without the user's knowledge.
Although Google has swiftly removed the apps after being notified (by the ever-vigilant Android Police bloggers), the apps in question have already been downloaded by at least 50,000 Android users.
The apps are particularly insidious because they look just like knockoff versions of already popular apps. For example, there's an app called simply "Chess." The user would download what he'd assume to be a chess game, only to be presented with a very different sort of app.
These apps are all pirated versions of popular games and utilities -- an expeditious solution for busy hackers. Once downloaded, the apps root the user's device using a method like rageagainstthecage, then use an Android executable file (APK) to nab user and device data, such as your mobile provider and user ID. Finally, the app acts as a wide-open backdoor for your device to quietly download more malicious code.
Below is a complete list of the bad apps, all of which were made by an entity called Myournet. If you've downloaded one of these apps, it might be best to take your device to your carrier and exchange it for a new one, since you can't be sure that your device and user information is truly secure. Considering how much we do on our phones -- shopping and mobile banking included -- it's better to take precautions.

  • Falling Down
  • Super Guitar Solo
  • Super History Eraser
  • Photo Editor
  • Super Ringtone Maker
  • Super Sex Positions
  • Hot Sexy Videos
  • Chess
  • 下坠滚球_Falldown
  • Hilton Sex Sound
  • Screaming Sexy Japanese Girls
  • Falling Ball Dodge
  • Scientific Calculator
  • Dice Roller
  • 躲避弹球
  • Advanced Currency Converter
  • APP Uninstaller
  • 几何战机_PewPew
  • Funny Paint
  • Spider Man
  • 蜘蛛侠
Remember, the Android Market is open, which can be great and unfortunate in different circumstances. Always read user reviews before you download; and if you have any doubts, play it safe.
Read More :- Android Malware.

New Laptop from Lenovo Is Controlled by Eye Movements.


Lenovo and Tobii Technology are tag-teaming on the world's first laptop with integrated eye control. Lenovo built the eye-controlled laptop using Tobii's eye-tracking technology. The prototype is on display at CeBIT in Hanover, Germany, this week.
While most computer manufacturers are working to deliver products with more natural interfaces, the Lenovo-Tobii effort is the first that lets users depend on their eyes to point, select and scroll down a page. The eye-control technology doesn't aim to replace the mouse and keyboard, but to enhance it. No financial terms of the deal were disclosed.
"More than anything else, the Tobii laptop prototype is proof that our eye-tracking technology is mature enough to be used in standard computer interfaces," said Henrik Eskilsson, CEO of Tobii. "To reach a state where the technology is part of the average computer, we need to make it smaller and cheaper."
Glance To Click
Here's how it works: Users can glance at an icon or gadget. The computer will then display additional information. Users can zoom in on pictures or maps and automatically center on what they are looking at.
The prototype computer can also brighten the screen when it recognizes a user's eyes to save battery life, and auto-dim it when no one is looking at the screen. Tobii says the eye-control technology can speed up usage by empowering new ways to switch between open windows, reading e-mails, and reviewing documents.
"We anticipate that people will be extremely excited to be able to control their computer with their eyes," said Barbara Barclay, general manager of Tobii North America. "But what we find most exciting are the opportunities that eye control as part of natural user interfaces offers consumer electronics manufacturers in a range of product categories."
Useful Enough?
Roger Kay, principal analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates, sees an immediate application for paraplegics. However, he added, there might be some convenience factor if you had your hands otherwise occupied.
"Lenovo needs to distinguish itself technologically to show that it's got something special and different. In the old days, the IBM technology was well engineered and robust, and that gave them a certain cache. But it wasn't enough early on to prevent Compaq or Dell from taking market share from them," Kay said. "This input method is a pretty distinct differentiator. This is something Lenovo could market because it's visible."
If Lenovo bought Tobii, the PC maker could prevent others from licensing the eye-control technology. But Kay isn't sure how useful the laptops toting the high-tech capabilities are at this point. Tobii didn't offer any specific usage cases.
Right now, there are 20 units in production. Tobii and Lenovo each have 10 for development and demonstration purposes. Eskilsson believes the eye-controlled PC can find its way to the mainstream market within two years by partnering with the right manufacturer. It appears that Tobii is betting on Lenovo. Eskilsson says the company is happy with the collaborative outcome.

Read More :- Lenovo Eye Movement Laptop.

Sony Ericsson Xperia PLAY Makes US Debut.


Sony Ericsson's Android-powered PlayStation gaming phone, the Xperia PLAY, made its US debut this evening at the Gaming Developer Conference in San Francisco.
Sony Ericsson also revealed that the PLAY will be the official mobile phone for Major League Gaming (MLG), North America's official pro video games league. MLG attracts about 40 million gamers and represents some of the top professional gamers in the world. The fact that a mobile phone is now counted as a medium for competitive gaming is a huge step for Android game developers.
Another exciting piece of news for gamers is that the Havok software development suite will be available to Android developers. This is the first time the cross-platform SDK, which is currently available to Xbox, Wii and Playstation develops, will be available for Android. Havok's technology is behind titles such as Halo's Reach, Asassin's Creed: Brotherhood, and Fallout: New Vegas.
We already got a chance to play with the Xperia Play at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last month. While the display is impressive and the controls seem solid, the phone's body feels a bit flimsy and plasticky. It is also unfortunate that it's not a 4G phone, as a 3G network isn't likely to produce the upload speed necessary to play multiplayer online games smoothly.
The PLAY will be coming to the US on Verizon and to Canada on Rogers, though pricing and availability have not yet been announced.

Gadgets galore at world's top tech fair.


HANOVER, Germany (AFP) – A Shakespeare-reciting robot, the world's most merciless alarm clock and "intelligent" cocktail shakers were among the gadgets wowing visitors at the CeBIT high-tech fair on Wednesday.
Ranging from the futuristic to the ingenious to the downright pointless, the world's biggest IT expo this year showcased thousands of the latest gadgets to pull in the 350,000 visitors expected to travel to Hanover in northern Germany.
No one finds it easy to wake up in the morning. But even the heaviest sleeper has found his match in the "intelligent" alarm clock designed by students at the Technical University of Wildau in Germany.
At the appointed time, the clock communicates with the curtains in the user's bedroom, instructing them to open. Five minutes later, it turns on the bedside lamp. Five minutes after that, the radio is turned on, then an alarm.
The sleepy user can only stop this pitiless process by standing on a sensor pad beside the bed for five seconds. When the alarm clock is satisfied its master is awake, it stops the alarm and turns on the coffee machine as reward.
"It was conceived by my students who sometimes find it tricky to get out of bed for classes," explained Birgit Wilkes from the university.
"But it has a serious application. We are using similar sensor technology to monitor the homes of old people to detect if they have had a fall," she added.
Worried about hair loss? Itching to see if you have a bald patch on top of your head? Then Spec, a Hong-Kong based firm, has the product for you with its hairbrush-cum-camera with built-in magnifier.
The user simply runs the brush through his hair and a magnified image of the scalp is transmitted to a computer, which then analyses the hair density over time to judge whether the dreaded baldness is setting in.
For the dental-health conscious, the company has also pioneered a toothbrush with a built-in camera that shows up hard-to-reach tooth plaque and tracks how efficiently you are brushing your teeth.
And for the discerning geek, the German Centre for Artificial Intelligence has created the "intelligent" talking cocktail shaker to ensure that every White Russian or Singapore Sling is mixed and poured to perfection.
The user inputs his or her chosen cocktail and the shaker's "voice" cheerfully offers the correct recipe.
Linked wirelessly to tiny devices on bottles on the bar, it ensures no mistakes are made no matter how many drinks have been consumed and berates the budding cocktail waiter in no uncertain terms if the wrong booze is selected.
This done, it offers pointers on how best to shake the cocktail, again reacting angrily if it senses its tips are not being followed to the letter.
Other gadgets were less practical, from sunglasses with a built-in camcorder to record exactly what your eye sees, a miniature helicopter piloted by iPhone to an electronic smokeless cigarette that replicates the sensation of smoking.
But there was no doubt what stole the show: the Shakespeare-reciting, multilingual, all-singing, all-dancing sleek life-sized white robot called the "RoboThespian" who drew huge crowds with its cheeky tricks.
From delivering the soliloquy from "Hamlet", complete with over-the-top theatrical actions, to impersonating another famous robot -- C3PO from "Star Wars" -- the charming computer quickly became the fair's star attraction.
Yours for a snip at 55,000 pounds (65,000 euros, $90,000), the "RoboThespian" has already featured at NASA, as well as at robot museums and banks, where it acts as a tour guide-cum-greeter with a difference.
Just don't get too close. The amorous and ever-friendly robot is not afraid of trying to plant a kiss on the cheeks of anyone it senses standing nearby.
The CeBIT runs until March 5.

Read Full Article Here :- Gadget Galore

New Trojan could mean attackers are waking up to Mac OS X.


Security firm Sophos has identified a new Trojan horse circulating that targets Apple’s Mac OS X platform, dubbing it OSX/MusMinim-A, after the malware’s apparent author. Although users still have to be tricked into downloading the Trojan—and the software currently claims it’s not finished and that more features are coming—the malware can run arbitrary Unix shell commands, shut down and restart the computer, put files on the desktop, and phish for users’ administration passwords. Sophos categorized the risk from the malware as low—and notes that its antivirus software can correctly detect and remove it—although the appearance of new malware targeting Mac OS X may re-ignite debates over the platform’s security.
Apple’s Macintosh platform hasn’t had a serious threat from viruses since the early 1990s, while Microsoft’s Windows platforms have been engaged in a constant state of war with malware, worms, viruses, and security exploits for decades. Many security experts point out this has more to do with the economics of the malware industry than anything inherently more secure about the Macintosh platform: it simply hasn’t been worth virus-writers’ time to target Mac OS X because Apple’s market share has been low enough that it wasn’t an appealing target. However, as Apple’s fortunes have climbed to stratospheric heights on the success of the iPhone and iPad, Macintosh sales have also increased—and many have expected malware authors to take notice of the platform.
The fact the Mac hasn’t had to deal with a significant malware threat in so long has also created a culture of complacency amongst Macintosh users, many of whom believe the Mac is somehow magically immune to malware—even experts don’t bother with antivirus software because, for the time being, there really isn’t anything for it to do. Nonetheless, most security researchers agree Mac OS X’s built-in security technologies are well behind other platform, although Apple has just invited security researchers to look at its forthcoming Mac OS X 10.7 “Lion.”
According to Sophos, the trojan (which calls itself Blackhole RAT, no relation to Michaël Fortin’s Black Hole wipedown software) is a variation on the darkComet remote access trojan (RAT) for Windows. Like all Trojan horses, the OSX/MusMinim-A malware needs to be executed by the user to affect a user’s machine; the most common distribution methods for Trojans are sites offering pirated software and other items that users expect to have to install on their computers.

Read More :- New MacOS Trojan Horse.

Malware Ads Hit London Stock Exchange Web Site.

Visitors to the London Stock Exchange's Web site were hit with malicious ads over the weekend, designed to pop up fake security messages on their computers.
The culprit was an online advertisement that was somehow placed on the Unanimis ad network, which is used by the the Web site, a London Stock Exchange spokeswoman said Monday. "We had an advert on the site that linked through to a third-party website that was hosting this malware," she said. She did not know how many people had been served the malicious ad.
The Stock Exchange's Web site itself was not compromised, and the ad was removed as soon as it was discovered on Sunday, she said.
Nevertheless, visitors to the site early Monday were greeted with browser warnings saying that londonstockexchange.com had been reported as an attack page. The warnings showed up in the Firefox, Chrome and Safari browsers, but were removed later in the day.
"The malware was a classic spoof antivirus program which used a software vulnerability to download and install native executable code," said Paul Mutton, a researcher with Web analytics firm Netcraft, who reported the issue on his personal blog.
The malware pops up a message on the victim's computer that reads "Warning! You're in danger! Your computer is infected with spyware." This is a common type of malicious program, called "rogue antivirus," which is designed to trick the user into paying for useless antivirus software. Typically the victim ends up handing money over to the scammers, but the malicious software doesn't really go away.
In an online chat, Mutton said he did not know what bug the hackers used to install their malware. He also said he couldn't discuss the incident further.
In a brief statement, Unanimis said it had found malware "which affected some advertisements on our network." Unanimis is owned by European telecommunications giant Orange France Telecom Group.
Security experts say that criminals have become adept at sneaking onto online ad networks in recent years. In December, Google's ad network was hit with a similar type of malware. That attack lasted for about five days, according to security vendor Armorize.

Read More :- Websites Hit By Malware Ad's.

Samsung to Launch 8.9-inch Galaxy Tab on March 22 .


Samsung has announced a special March 22 event where it's very likely to unveil a new, 8.9-inch version of its Galaxy Tab tablet.
The Mobile Unpacked event, announced on Samsung's official Facebook page, is set during CTIA in Orlando, Florida under the motto "What's your TAB life?"
It is accompanied by an image of the Tab sporting the numbers 78910, which probably indicate all the different varieties of the Tab that Samsung plans to launch this year: the 7-inch Tab and the 10.1-inch Tab are already here, and all that's missing is the previously rumored 8.9-inch model.
Samsung gave us no further details about the event, merely saying it's got "more surprises in store." We'd be surprised if the new, 8.9-inch tablet was running anything other than Android 3.0 (Honeycomb), and was drastically different (hardware-wise) than the 10.1 model, though.

Read More :- Samsung Galaxy 8.9 Inch Tablet.

Upgrade Your Life: Simple security for your cell phone.


Haven't bothered to password-protect your smartphone yet? You might regret the oversight the next time you leave your handset in the back seat of a cab—or worse, after it's stolen by a pickpocket.
After all, your cell phone probably contains a lot more information than just your address book. There's your e-mail to consider, your precious photos and sensitive documents, and all those stored usernames and passwords for access to your Facebook, Twitter, and (gulp!) online banking accounts.
Luckily, you can protect your iPhone, Android phone, BlackBerry, or other make of smartphone in just a few easy steps—and that's the subject of this week's episode Upgrade Your Life.

1. Lock it up.
2. Beef up your security. 
3. Locate — or wipe — your lost phone.
4. Keep your browser from storing website passwords.
5. Secure all your other passwords.

Read More about it here :- Cell Phone Security.    

Dual-Screen Personal Computer.

Next generation technology will be presented by the company's personal computer (PC) Fujitsu. Vendors that will spawn dual-screen technology on a smart phone. Fujitsu's next-generation technology will be exhibited at CEATEC this week. Generation of two-screen technology itself will be created thanks to the involvement of TAT, which seemed almost ready for production.

Generation of dual-screen technology from Fujitsu and TAT will present the ideal screen size of 960x480 which have a touch-screen technology. Display device right next to each other which would obviously be useful to users.

Both displays on this phone is capable rotated between portrait and landscape, creating a good image size is large or small. Scroling above the main function as an email and scroling under useful as a browser.

Read More :- Dual Screen PC

Computers in the Form of a Smart Pen.

The idea in the world of IT is always emerged from studies of how human life. How human activity becomes easier and easier. Writing for instance, who was replaced by typing, and then came the PC for texting. Then, if all people then have to replace the habit of writing with a pen to typing with a computer? Apparently not. A study conducted by Livescribe, a provider of innovative products from Oakland, California, United States, showed that the sample of consumers who agree to leave the writing with a pen to the computer by 72 percent. While 28 percent said no.

As a result of consumers the last number is very dependent continuous with paper, pen, and ink. They seemed to be a displaced part of technological progress. It did not. Attention to the needs of these customers are then correlated with information technology effectively and efficiently, creating the idea of making smart pen products which help all the activities that traditional pen enthusiasts. Such as, copying and storing of data writing and drawing with the original display in the form of digital media. Text results doodles that can then be converted into computer text is generally kind Words. While sketches or doodles original display packed into PDF format.

Smart pen that can also be in charge of recording the conversation, which is usually difficult to be recorded by hand. Pena wrote enough points like numbers for the marker. Smart pen the next technology that allows users to store their data in digital technology. Electronic pen by Mike Lim, representatives from Livescribe, was mentioned more intelligent than the Montblanc. "Livescribe's mission is to improve data collection, access and share information both orally and in writing that improve communication, collaboration, productivity, and learning," said Jim Marggraff, CEO and founder of Livescribe.

Echo smartpen tested this with a brand like being in two worlds, the world's past and the virtual world. Virtual world, because all the files when it has displaced to a computer can be distributed, either by email, or even sent to Facebook, Twitter, and other blogs or social networks in the form of image or audio.

Mike was right. This smartpen is a supermini computer. Inside are the ARM 9 and an OLED screen 96 x 18 pixels. A memory storage space measuring 4 GB or 8GB (there are two options). Speakers and microphone like a tape recorder. Port mikroUSB to the needs of the rechargeable battery connections and transfer data. So how big this one is a digital pen? 15.8 cm long and weighs just 36 grams with a half part coated by a rubber tip for comfortable use. Pena, of course, remains generally ink pen. While the runway is used just like regular paper, but does have a special specification.

Notes named dot paper notebook is equipped with a starter like a paper appointment book, menu icons, as well as calculators, as well as check the battery's main menu, check the memory. This device is powered by a lithium ion battery (rechargeable) and can survive for up to five hours of high usage. A 3.5-mm audio port allows to stream audio to the earphone.

Read More :- Computer In A Form Of Smart Pen.