Sunday 31 January 2016

Alphabet changes results format to separate Google, other bets

Hoping to provide greater clarity into the performance of its many holdings, Alphabet Inc  said it would report financial results under two segments, Google and "Other Bets," when it releases fourth-quarter earnings on Monday.
Under Google, Alphabet will report the results of its main Internet and related businesses such as search, ads, maps, YouTube, Android, Chrome and Google Play, and hardware products such as Chromecast, Chromebooks and Nexus, as well as its virtual reality offerings. 
"Other Bets" will detail Alphabet's other businesses including Access/Google Fiber, Calico, Nest, Verily (formerly known as Google Life Sciences), GV (once known as Google Ventures), Google Capital and X, better known as Google X.
Alphabet said there would be no changes to its consolidated financial reporting but some changes would be made to how it breaks out revenue.
Investors and analysts had praised the move to the Alphabet structure as a shift towards greater transparency and fiscal discipline when it was announced in August.
It will provide investors their first detailed peek into the finances of the parts of Google outside its highly profitable search engine.
In a blog post announcing the changes, Alphabet's chief executive, Larry Page, said the change allows the company to take the "long-term view" of its holdings and invest "at the scale of the opportunities and resources we see."
"Fundamentally we believe this (structure) allows us more management scale, as we can run things independently that aren't very related."

Since the Aug. 10 announcement, Alphabet's stock price has climbed almost 13 percent, closing at $748.30 on Thursday. In addition, the company is close to displacing Apple Inc as the most valuable U.S. tech company.

Amazon shorts make money with deft timing on Thursday's wild ride

Amazon.com Inc  shares' unusual roller-coaster move before and after the world's No. 1 online retailer reported quarterly results on Thursday helped some traders make money shorting the stock.
From Wednesday's close of trading to Friday afternoon, Amazon shares are only about 1 percent lower, trading at $579.50. In between, the stock was all over the place, hitting a Thursday high of $638.06 and falling to a low of $540 in the action after Thursday's close.
The stock rallied 9 percent on Thursday before results were released. It was bolstered by solid earnings Wednesday from social media giant Facebook, and traders hoped for big gains for Amazon post-earnings, as the previous four quarterly releases had been celebrated by investors.
Thursday's rally, the largest on the day of results over the last two years, invited shorts to capitalize on the spike, and they reaped gains when the shares slumped after the close.
"I am a big fan of Amazon the company," said Kathryn Venator, a Annapolis, Maryland-based independent trader who runs Katwerks Ventures, a consulting business. "(But the) rally was out of control."
Venator expected profit-taking at the day's end. She shorted 60 shares of Amazon for $628.33 apiece at around 3 p.m. EST (2000 GMT). But the trade did not work as expected. Shares kept rallying into the close, and Venator tried to close her short, to no avail.
"I immediately began planning how I would exit on Friday with a loss," she said.
Fortunately for her, Amazon shares plunged in after-hours action. The company posted its most profitable quarter ever but its per-share profit of $1.00 fell short of analysts' average forecast of $1.56.
Shares dropped 15 percent, hitting a low of $540 in trading after the bell. Venator was able to cover her short position on Friday. Ali Banai, 20, a New York-based trader, says he largely depended on technical signals to put on his trade.
"If you draw a trendline you see a bearish trend after it reached the $630 mark. That's when I started to do a short," he said.
On Wednesday and Thursday, Banai shorted Amazon shares for an average price of $625. Banai, who is in the process of getting a license for his own investment firm, said his position was between 100 and 500 shares.
He said the average post-earnings jump of 10 percent for the shares over the last four quarters meant the shares were overvalued.

"There always has to be a pullback."

Nokia-Samsung patent verdict expected within days


Nokia (NOKIA.HE) and Samsung (005930.KS) are expected to settle their two-year patent dispute within days, with analysts forecasting a one-time payment of hundreds of millions of euros for the Finnish company.
Nokia entered into a binding arbitration with South Korea's Samsung in 2013 to settle additional compensations for a five-year period starting from early 2014.
The International Chamber of Commerce's arbitration court is due to make its ruling on the issue imminently.
Nordea analyst Sami Sarkamies, one of few analysts to give a precise estimate, said the verdict could boost Nokia's operating profit by about 700 million euros ($758 mln) this year, forecasting the court will stipulate an annual patent fee of 300 million euros.
"Samsung has been paying Nokia probably 100 million per year, and the rate could now come up to around 300 million euros (per year). The settled rate will also be paid retrospectively for the last two years," Sarkamies said.
"But they have already booked perhaps 100 million a year from Samsung to their income statement, so the EBIT impact for this year could be around 700 million euros."
Sarkamies has a "hold" rating on Nokia shares, which have fallen 9 percent since last April when it announced a 15.6 billion euro takeover of French network gear rival Alcatel-Lucent (ALUA.PA), due to be completed this quarter.
Investors have worried about the integration process and special terms negotiated by the French government, but the share price could get a boost if the settlement with Samsung is much bigger than analysts forecasts.
Last month, Sweden's Ericsson (ERICb.ST) said that a patent license deal with Apple Inc (AAPL.O) would help lift its intellectual property rights revenue by up to 40 percent in 2015, sending its shares up sharply.
Nokia, which once dominated the global mobile phones market, is now focused on telecom network equipment but still holds on to a portfolio of phone patents.
It said last month that the International Chamber of Commerce had advised that the settlement with Samsung is expected by the end of January.
A Nokia spokesman declined to comment on Saturday, saying the company had nothing to add beyond the previous statement.

($1 = 0.9233 euros)

Saturday 30 January 2016

HSBC UK Internet banking back up after cyber attack

HSBC said its British personal banking websites were back up and running on Saturday after a cyber attack forced them to close for most of the previous day.
Europe's largest lender said it had "successfully defended" its systems against a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack but was not able to fully restore services immediately as it continued to experience threats.
But customers were able to log-on again from 2100 GMT on Friday, the bank said, after an outage which had started that morning.

"HSBC Internet and mobile banking are now fully recovered. Thanks for your patience and again we apologise for the disruption," the bank told customers via social media.

Microsoft's secret weapon for growth in the cloud: email

In reporting better-than-expected fiscal second-quarter earnings on Thursday, Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) CEO Satya Nadella touted his company's success in the cloud.
"Businesses everywhere are using the Microsoft Cloud as their digital platform to drive their ambitious transformation agendas," he said.
What he didn't mention was the role that one of the company's much older products played in the success of this new technology: Microsoft Exchange Server, which many of the world's largest companies rely on for email services.
When companies begin moving data to the cloud, typically a network of servers managed by an outside company, a common first step is to move email, often with other office software tools but sometimes on its own.
For companies already relying on Microsoft Exchange and Outlook for sending and receiving email, information technology managers say, turning to the same company to handle that data in the cloud seems like a logical move.
That's what happened at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
The school was looking to streamline its technology by moving to the cloud, starting with email, because it is "a pain to operate," said Bob Plankers, a virtualization architect at the university. "Aside from email servers, you need to worry about spam and virus scanning," he added.
For the transition, Plankers said he chose Microsoft's cloud-based Office 365 product because the university already used Outlook.
"It's just a really natural thing," said Matt McIllwain, an investor at Madrona Venture Group, about companies starting their cloud transition with email and other widely used office software from Microsoft. "It's easier and can be more cost effective to run it on the cloud, and let Microsoft worry about your Exchange servers."
Such thinking helps explain how Microsoft has become the second largest provider of cloud infrastructure, services and software, well ahead of Salesforce (CRM.N), Oracle (ORCL.N) and Google (GOOG.O), according to a Goldman Sachs analysis.
The company announced Thursday that it was on track to generate $9.4 billion in annual cloud-based revenue, up from $5.5 billion a year ago.
Microsoft remains far behind market leader Amazon (AMZN.O), but it has become the fastest-growing major cloud provider. Its key Azure business has more than doubled year on year, well above the 65 percent growth rate of market leader Amazon, according to Goldman.
Microsoft has worked hard to exploit the advantage its mail software provides. "Maybe one of the first steps is you want to move your email. That's fine," says Takeshi Numoto, corporate vice president for cloud and enterprise marketing. "That gets us more opportunity to engage with customers."
Investor McIllwain called that strategy smart, because customers who move their Outlook email to Microsoft's cloud typically use a Microsoft directory service that controls access to that email. It then becomes simple to use that same directory to provide designated employees access to other data and services that are later moved to Microsoft's cloud.
The strategy isn't foolproof, however. Over seven months last year, Clif Bar, an Oakland, Calif.-based snack provider, moved all its Outlook email, along with other applications like document management and workflow, to Azure.
The company nevertheless moved its enterprise resource management to the cloud services of another longtime partner: Oracle.
As cloud services rapidly expand, Microsoft will have to demonstrate that its products are equal to, or better than, those of its competitors in both quality and price.

Currently, many companies favour Microsoft because it offers more flexibility in terms of moving software around, say from a company's own data centre to the one it has outsourced to Azure, said Frank Gillett, an analyst at Forrester Research. But Amazon's AWS offers more types of tools, and has a longer track record selling cloud services, he said.

Friday 29 January 2016

Sony says bracing for smartphone slowdown after sensor sales dip

Sony Corp, widely regarded as a key supplier of image sensors for Apple Inc's iPhones, said on Friday it was bracing for a slowdown in the premium smartphone market after sales of its sensors fell in the third quarter.
Videogame sales and cost cuts in Sony's flagging mobile unit pushed October-December operating profit up 11 percent, beating analyst estimates, but the firm confirmed a much-feared hit to a segment that in recent quarters helped it shake off years of losses.
"Demand for image sensors from certain customers has slowed since November due to a slowdown in the high-end smartphone market," Chief Financial Officer Kenichiro Yoshida told reporters at a briefing, without naming the clients.
Worries about weaker iPhone sales and a slowdown in China's smartphone market - the world's biggest - have weighed on Sony shares in recent weeks. The stock closed up 6.1 percent ahead of earnings, still down around 16 percent since the start of 2016.
Yoshida said Sony was planning its budget for the next year assuming a fall in global demand for high-end smartphones.
Sony also said October-December sales of devices, including image sensors, fell 13 percent from a year earlier. The segment, also hit by weak battery sales, booked a loss of 11.7 billion yen compared with a 53.8 billion yen profit in the year prior.
In addition to image sensors, Sony has depended on cost cuts and strong sales of PlayStation 4 games to improve its bottom line over the past year.
The two factors helped its fiscal third-quarter operating profit rise 11 percent from a year earlier to 202.1 billion yen ($1.68 billion), beating the average 175 billion yen forecast of 8 analysts according to Thomson Reuters data.
It said quarterly sales of its game and network services division rose 11 percent, helped by strong holiday sales of PlayStation 4 videogames. It raised its full-year forecast for the division to an operating profit of 85 billion yen from an October forecast of 80 billion.
In mobile, sales fell 15 percent in a division struggling to compete with Apple and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, as well as low-cost Asian rivals. But operating income more than doubled to 24 billion yen as Sony cut spending on marketing and development and gave up its pursuit of market share.
The company maintained its outlook for full-year operating profit to grow to 320 billion yen from 68.5 billion in the previous year.

($1 = 120.5500 yen)

Apple building secret team to work on virtual reality: FT

Apple Inc has assembled a large team of experts in virtual and augmented reality and built prototypes of headsets that could one day rival Facebook's Oculus Rift or Microsoft's Hololens, the Financial Times reported.
A secret research unit, housing hundreds of staff assembled from acquisitions or poached from other companies, is working on next-generation headset technologies, the FT reported, citing people familiar with the initiative. (on.ft.com/1PK0dUI)

The newspaper had previously reported the hiring of leading virtual reality researcher Doug Bowman by the iPhone maker. (on.ft.com/1SgnhuR)

Facebook to prohibit private firearm transactions on its service

Facebook Inc (FB.O) prohibited global users from coordinating person-to-person private sales of firearms on its online social network and its Instagram photo-sharing service on Friday, countering concerns that it was increasingly being used to circumvent background checks on gun purchases.
The move comes as the United States debates the issue of access to guns after a string of mass shootings. U.S. President Barack Obama has urged social media companies to clamp down on gun sales organized on their platforms.
It updates Facebook's regulated goods policy, introduced in March 2014, that banned people from selling marijuana, pharmaceuticals and illegal drugs.
Facebook already prohibited private firearms sellers from advertising "no background check required," or offering transactions across U.S. state lines without a licensed dealer because the company said such posts indicated a willingness to evade the law.
Licensed retailers will still be able to advertise firearms on Facebook that lead to transactions outside of Facebook's service, the spokeswoman said.
"Over the last two years, more and more people have been using Facebook to discover products and to buy and sell things to one another," Monika Bickert, Facebook's head of product policy, said in a statement.
"We are continuing to develop, test, and launch new products to make this experience even better for people and are updating our regulated goods policies to reflect this evolution," Bickert said.
Facebook is the world's most popular online social network, with 1.59 billion users across the globe, 219 million of them in the United States and Canada.
The National Rifle Association, a lobbying group opposed to limits on U.S. gun ownership rights, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Groups advocating increased gun control applauded the new policy.

"Moms are grateful for the leadership shown by Facebook today," said Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, a part of the Everytown for Gun Safety campaign group. "Our continued relationship with Facebook resulted in today's even stronger stance, which will prevent dangerous people from getting guns and save American lives.”

Wednesday 27 January 2016

New Anti-Hacking Tech Korean Banks Failed to Join Blockchain Consortium


It has been found that Korean banks such as Shinhan Bank, KB Kookmin Bank, KEB Hana Bank, Woori Bank and the Industrial Bank of Korea (IBK) and the Korean financial institutions including the Korea Financial Telecommunication & Cleanings Institute and the Financial Security Institute recently failed to join R3CEV due to their shortage of fintech standards.
R3CEV is a voluntary consortium of global banks organized with the blockchain startup of R3. It is the first case in which the concept of bitcoin-based blockchain is incorporated into a financial institution. The initial members were eight European banks but the number of members has increased to 42, including Citigroup, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and UBS. 
The blockchain among banks is more closed and private than bitcoin transactions in which all information are open and anonymity is ensured. The former is characterized by more convenient financial transactions, lower fees and a higher level of security based on the distributed storage of transaction information. This new anti-hacking technique for the security of online financial transactions allows financial transaction data to be distributed and stored in different servers and updated with frequency.
Blockchain utilization in the Korean financial market is still in its early stage. “Once banks join a blockchain consortium, they have to disclose all their transaction information, and thus they need to have systems and personnel capable of handling the requirement first,” said an industry insider, adding, “However, Korean banks have been reliant on outsourcing and have yet to be capable of actually utilizing the blockchain system with their own engineers.”
Their failed attempt is likely to pose a burden on Korean financial institutions in general. A blockchain’s vulnerability to hacking is more and more reduced as the amount of transactions allowed to be shared and stored increases. In addition, a larger number of members is more advantageous because more costs are required for faster transactions, which means the introduction of a blockchain by Korean institutions alone has its own limit.

Hacking The Fortress Of Antivirus Software

In true crime-fiction fashion, can we envision a situation in which software programmers and the researchers behind commercial antivirus titles are held hostage for their security information? Depending on the fish that hackers are hoping to catch, having a little reluctant inside help could come in very handy.
But as one tech reporter has stated, what if that inside help isn’t so reluctant? Internal data breaches are increasing in occurrence, thanks to the potential payoffs involved. Rick Robinson for SecurityIntelligence.com brought up an interesting point: your antivirus is only as good as the developer who wants to keep your content safe:
“But who will guard the guards themselves? As this Latin proverb suggests, the security challenges of safeguarding protective systems are not new. In fact, they are inherent in the nature of security measures.
“Security guards need passkeys, which means that one way for the bad guys to get hold of those keys is to steal them from a guard. In the same way, security software needs to have access to high-level permissions. In fact, most of the familiar Hollywood tricks for getting past the guards have their cyber equivalents, from simply taking out a guard (disabling the software) to dressing up in a guard uniform and issuing fake instructions (abusing the software’s system permissions).”
That’s why Robinson and other techxperts are looking for alternatives to the way we currently protect our computers and networks from attack. Unfortunately, we’re still in a climate where convincing users to even have those antivirus protections in place is still a problem, so getting them install updates, patches, and other bug fixes may be even harder.

FBI used child pornography site hosted on Dark Web to prosecute pedophiles

The FBI hacked into a child pornography site hosted on the Dark Web, but instead of immediately shutting it down, it used its content to lure and prosecute pedophiles.
After hacking the site, known as "Playpen," the FBI decided to let it run for 13 days and allow images of child sexual abuse to be distributed, according toMotherboard.
Although information on the network investigation tool is just being revealed,court filings show the FBI's operation took place from Feb. 20, 2015 to March 4, 2015.
While the FBI's actions are against normal operational procedure, the government was able to collect IP addresses and install malware on the computers of those who frequented the site. Documents show that there were 215,000 registered users at the time of the investigation.
However, the FBI only collected identifiable information of around 1,300 people who logged in or registered during those 13 days.
Out of all the identified site users, the FBI was able to charge 137 people with a crime.
"We had a window of opportunity to get into one of the darkest places on Earth, and not a lot of other options except to not do it," Ron Hoski, former FBI agent, told USA Today. "There was no other way we could identify as many players."
The FBI was also able to hack computers in other countries, which led to arrests in Denmark, Greece and Chile.

Tuesday 26 January 2016

VTech restores some online services after massive hacking scandal

Electronic toy maker VTech has restored some of its online services more than a month after a massive data breach exposed the personal data of some 10 million customer accounts worldwide.
The company has reopened key functions of its Learning Lodge app – its online portal which allows users to download games and content to their VTech device – including giving customers the ability to register and manage their account.
Some of the company’s other services remain offline, though.

“After the cyber attack, we have focused on further strengthening security around user registration information and other services within Learning Lodge. With the key services now resumed, we strongly suggest that our existing customers log in to Learning Lodge as soon as they can and change their passwords,” said Allan Wong, chairman and CEO of VTech, in a statement.
“We apologize that there are still some Learning Lodge services that remain unavailable at this time. We continue to work very hard towards re-opening them as soon as possible.”
Data from both parents and children was exposed after the company’s app database was hacked in November. It contained customer names, email addresses, passwords, IP addresses, mailing addresses and download histories as well as kids’ profile information, including names, genders and dates of birth. It’s alleged the hacker also obtained children’s head shots attached to gaming profiles, as well as chat logs between kids and parents.
Over 237,000 Canadian adult profiles and 316,000 children profiles were affected by the breach.

According to “Have I been Pwned,” a website dedicated to detailing the Internet’s worst data breaches, the VTech hack is now the fourth largest consumer data breach in history.
To compare, the Ashley Madison data breach comes in second.
British authorities made an arrest in the case in mid-December, but no further information has been released regarding the investigation.
According to a statement, the company has been working with a leading cyber security team to heighten the level of data protection on its services.
“VTech continues to work on and is committed to further data security improvements so that customers of VTech products and services can be rest assured the data they entrust with VTech is secure,” read the statement.
As mentioned, if you have a Learning Lodge account, you should log in and change your password as soon as possible to ensure your account is secure.

Tips for creating secure passwords

Any data breach is a good reminder to make sure your passwords are secure. To make sure yours is strong, try to stay away from easy-to-guess options like “123456″ or “password” and easy-to-guess identifiers, like your dog’s name.
Numbers included in a password should never be something easy to guess based on the user. That means your age, the current year or your address are not good choices. Similarly, the longer the password the better.

Passwords that use up to 10 uppercase and lowercase letters mixed with numbers are proven to be more secure – despite being hard to remember.
One tip is to construct a password from a sentence, mix in a few upper case letters and a number – for example, “There is no place like home,” would become “tiNOplh62.”
And remember, try not to use the same password for any two accounts.

Tuesday 19 January 2016

WhatsApp won’t charge $1 annual fee, will get more businesses on board

WhatsApp, which has over 900 million monthly active users, is now a totally free app as the $1 annual subscription fee has been dropped. According to a blogpost from WhatsApp, the company said that charging the subscription fee, has not really worked well.
The blogpost reads, “Many WhatsApp users don’t have a debit or credit card number and they worried they’d lose access to their friends and family after their first year. So over the next several weeks, we’ll remove fees from the different versions of our app and WhatsApp will no longer charge you for our service.”
Also see: WhatsApp aims to take over Skype with video calling feature
WhatsApp co-founder Jan Koum also confirmed the announcement at the annual Digital-Life-Design (DLD) conference in Munich. “Today, we are announcing that WhatsApp is going to be free to users. We aren’t going to charge a dollar a year anymore,” he said.
Koum also spoke about making WhatsApp fully encrypted for users on Android phones. “We are a couple of months away from calling it done,” Koum said, noting that once completed, WhatsApp will represent the world’s largest service offering completely private messaging.
“Soon we will be able to talk more about this,” he added.
Also read: Google testing AI-based messaging app: Here’s why
So how does WhatsApp plan to make money ? WhatsApp won’t go for third-party ads in case you were afraid of that, but it will start testing tools to allow users to communicate with “businesses and organizations” on WhatsApp that they might be interested in. Sort of like the channels in BlackBerry Messenger or apps like Line also offer, but WhatsApp appears to have a slightly different idea.
The post gives a hint of how this could work, and says that the communications could be with your bank about a transaction or with an airline about delayed flights. Essentially the kind of messages and alerts that we normally get on our phones might soon start appearing on WhatsApp itself if more, and more organisations create an account on WhatsApp.
In India of course, many local businesses rely on WhatsApp to stay in touch with their customers who use the service to place orders either for daily groceries or even home-delivery from restaurants.

Monday 18 January 2016

Meet the hacker using YouTube to keep us safe

In an age when hackers trade techniques on the dark web and sell them to intelligence agencies, Samy Kamkar takes a more entertaining approach: YouTube.
A display of the 30-year-old's digital mischief, the video series Applied Hacking teaches some 50,000 subscribers flashy hacks, and no household item is immune. He has tweaked a kids' toy to open garage doors, 3D-printed a lock-­cracking robot, devised a fake charger that can sniff keystrokes in wireless keyboards, and even hijacked cars' smartphone apps to remotely unlock and start the vehicles.
"I just assume everything is vulnerable," he says. "It's a pretty safe bet."
Kamkar gained notoriety in 2005 as the creator of the Samy worm, viral code that added unwitting MySpace users to his friends list and displayed the text "Samy is my hero" on their profiles. It worked too well, ripping through the site and bringing Kamkar a million new friends in 24 hours, along with a visit from very unfriendly Secret Service agents. He pleaded guilty to computer tampering and was banned from using computers for three years.
After that ordeal, Kamkar approaches his research with strict transparency. He says he alerts firms to vulnerabilities in their products but doesn't profit from his hacks and won't acceptsecurity consulting work, to avoid conflicts of interest.
"I want to do what I think is right," he says. "That's hard when someone's paying you."
Instead, he takes his reward from his modest fame -- close to three million YouTube views so far -- and the thrill of solving the hidden puzzles he finds in everything 
he touches. 

BlackBerry Addresses Dutch Police Hacking Claims

BlackBerry is a firm that has had an interesting ride in the mobile market over the past five years. Much like Nokia, they climbed to the top of the ladder, but failed to adopt smartphone operating systems akin to iOS and Android. After a failed experiment with QNX and BlackBerry OS 10, the company is now using Android, with the PRIV from last year being their first Android-powered device. Earlier this week, reports from Dutch police emerged claiming that they could hack open and extract whatever information they wanted, including deleted emails. Now, BlackBerry is refuting these claims.
The story goes that the Netherlands Forensic Institute (NFI) were able to hack into BlackBerry devices that use the Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) encryption method. The NFI help the Dutch police and authorities obtain forensic evidence, which these days involves a lot of data and online behaviour, so the idea that they can crack open a BlackBerry is an interesting one, and perhaps worrying to some. Well, BlackBerry have refuted these claims in a blog post, albeit in a fairly careful manner. The Canadian firm says that “there are no backdoors in any BlackBerry devices, and BlackBerry does not store and therefore cannot share BlackBerry device passwords with law enforcement or anyone else” and that “provided that users follow recommended practices, BlackBerry devices remain as secure and private as they have always been”.
However, for all their big talk, BlackBerry did say that they didn’t have “any details on the specific device or the way that it was configured, managed or otherwise protected” or which types of communications were apparently decrypted. This whole saga has quickly become a classic case of finger-pointing with little evidence. The NFI aren’t likely to release their methods, should BlackBerry patch older devices that might be in use by career criminals, and BlackBerry are unlikely to admit to a break in their devices. Considering that the consumer market has pretty much abandoned BlackBerry, governments and law enforcement agencies the world over are all that the Canadian firm have left, so these news has probably given their biggest remaining customers some food for thought. We suppose it’s a good job that Android devices will get monthly security updates from Google these days, right?

ANONYMOUS HACKS NISSAN SITE IN PROTEST AGAINST JAPANESE WHALE, DOLPHIN HUNTING

Anonymous has hacked two of Nissan's websites in Japan as part of its protest against Japan's continued killing of dolphins and whales.
The hacking group claimed responsibility Wednesday for taking the two sites down, with one alleged member calling for the country on Twitter to "stop the killing now," according to Fortune. Other accounts backed by Anonymous called the hack "punishment" for Japan's hunting activities involving the two mammals.
The Japanese automaker is the latest target of Anonymous' OpWhales campaign aimed at ending this treatment of dolphins and whales, as the collective did the same to the Japanese president and other government departments' websites in recent weeks, BBC News reported. The activist group previously launched cyber-attacks against Icelandic institutions in November for the same reason, leading to most of the country's government sites being unavailable for about 13 hours.
Nissan has said that it doesn't have an opinion on hunting activities involving whales and dolphins.
One of the hackers explained that Anonymous went after Nissan because it is a big corporation in Japan, adding that "we have targeted big corporations to spread awareness about the killing [of dolphins] in the cove in Taiji because the Japanese news is censoring it."
"As a note for Nissan, we are not out to harm your customer data or system data," the hacker said.
Targeting Anonymous has proved to be challenge for some law-enforcement agencies, since the group works through encrypted channels to assign targets and members are loosely affiliated with one another, Fortune noted.
Nissan's websites in the U.S. and Europe are still online, according to BBC News.
"At Nissan, customer privacy and security is of utmost importance, and we take any potential threat to our information systems seriously," a company spokesman said, adding that the automaker is temporarily suspending service on its websites to reduce further risks.
"Nissan continuously monitors and takes aggressive steps to ensure the protection of our information systems and all of our data," the spokesman said.

Probe begins into OUAT website hacking case

The commissionerate police on Saturday started investigation into the hacking of official website of the Orissa University of Agriculture and Technology (OUAT).

The police began the probe on the basis of an FIR lodged by university authorities on Saturday at the Khandagiri police station.

In the FIR, OUAT registrar Prof Rabindra Kumar Das said the official website of the university (www.ouat.ac.in) has been hacked on January 15 at about 7pm. "On getting information from the authority immediate action has been taken at our end by disabling the website," said Das.

The registrar urged the police to conduct a thorough investigation in the sensitive matter. "After obtaining a due clearance from the investigating agency, the OUAT website would be restored," he mentioned in the FIR.

The copy of the FIR was marked to Bhubaneswar DCP Satyabrat Bhoi. A similar complaint was also forwarded to the head of the cyber cell of the crime branch.


The DCP said the police have started investigation into the matter. "If needed, we will hire professional expert to help us in tracing the hacker," he said, adding, "We can't assess anything immediately as the investigation is in preliminary stage. We can able to know about the case whether it is a mischief or hacking after the investigation is over," he added.

An official said the hacker in the name of 'don' hacked the website and also posted some slangs along with a photo on the website.


Earlier, a hacker had defaced an old website of regional transport office (RTO) of Ganjam district a few days ago. The crime branch is probing the hacking issue.

ad2