Windows XP Flaw Are Extremely Serious

Blogged under Software News by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:36 pm

At first, the vulnerability was exploited by just a few dozen Web sites. Programming code embedded in these pages would install a program that warned victims their machines were infested with spyware, then prompted them to pay $40 to remove the supposed pests. Since then, however, hundreds of sites have begun using the flaw to install a broad range of malicious software. SANS has received several reports of attackers blasting out spam e-mails containing links that lead to malicious sites exploiting the new flaw, Ullrich said.

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  • How The U.S. Government Undermined the Internet

    Blogged under Web by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:39 pm

    The Register has an article about U.S. Government backed policy changes that have led ICANN to redelegate top level domains in such a way as to provide ‘greater state-controlled censorship on the internet, reduce people’s ability to use the internet to communicate freely, and leave expansion of the internet in the hands of the people least capable of doing the job’. At that meeting, consciously and for the first time, ICANN used a US government-provided reason to turn over Kazakhstan’s internet ownership to a government owned and run association without requiring consent from the existing owners. The previous owners, KazNIC, had been created from the country’s Internet community. ICANN then immediately used that ‘precedent’ to hand ownership of Iraq’s internet over to another government-run body, without accounting for any objections that the existing owners might have.

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  • Microsoft’s Big Bet on Online Gaming

    Blogged under Software News by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:42 pm

    The Wall Street Journal Online analyzes the prospects of the Xbox’s online-gaming component. Analysts say Microsoft has spent hundreds of millions on Xbox Live, with little guarantees of returns. ‘It is not clear that companies like Microsoft and Sony will be able to lure large numbers of players — each has attracted a small fraction of users to online play with their previous consoles,’ WSJ Online writes. ‘The companies also must be careful about new business models for distributing games — such as games-on-demand — so as not to alienate game publishers, who still rely heavily on in-store sales. And games designed for multiple players have a mixed record of attracting customers.’ Says analyst Michael Pachter, ‘At the end of the day, we don’t play games for social interaction … We play games to escape.’ Microsoft’s strategy is ‘absolutely flawed,’ he added.

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  • RIAA Bullies Witnesses Into Perjury

    Blogged under News by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:44 pm

    A Michigan couple is counter-suing the RIAA after they learned that the RIAA had bullied their witnesses into lying. The story revolves around a 15-year-old girl who, when deposed, told how RIAA lawyers told her that she had to commit perjury just so they could win their case. From the article: ‘Q - Did [the RIAA lawyer] tell you why he needed you to stick with your original false story? A - Because he said he didn’t have a case unless I did. Q - So, he told you that he didn’t have a case unless you stuck with the original false story?

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    Blogged under Hardware News by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:47 pm

    David Pogue, the influential personal technology columnist for the New York Times, has chosen what he calls ‘10 of the year’s best small, sweet improvements in our electronic lives.’ Rather than your average pseudo-commercial list of branded devices, it’s a list of improvements. As Pogue puts it at the end of his column: ‘Come New Year’s Eve, raise one tiny toast to the anonymous engineers whose eccentricities or idealism brought these sparkling developments to life.’ They are (sans explanation): the folding memory card, the voice mail VCR, the front-side TV connector, the bigger-than-TV movie, TV à la carte, the outer-button flip phone, the free domain name, the modular DVD screen, the family-portrait burst mode, and the hybrid high-definition tape.’

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