Google responds to Congress over privacy policy inquiries

Google has responded to Congress, defending its decision to make a controversial change to its privacy policy.

Mystery and mayhem surrounding MegaUpload (roundup)

Charges of Web piracy are at the center of a legal battle embroiling the hosting site MegaUpload and its founder, the colorful Kim DotCom. Hackers get into the fray, too, early on.

SOPA support gets UFC president hacked

In a recent interview, mixed-martial arts chief Dana White suggested that members of the hacktivist group Anonymous were "cowards" and "terrorists.".

Anonymous takes aim over Europe's SOPA

Online activists Anonymous are targeting the European Parliament and supporters of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), which critics say would curtail freedom of expression and encourage surveillance by service providers.

Facebook IPO may be downsized to $5 billion

Facebook's initial public offering may raise $5 billion, half of what was previously estimated, according to a new report on International Financing Review. Facebook is expected to file papers to go public as early as tomorrow.

iPhone 5 could see June debut at Apple confab, report says

Smartphone users champing at the bit for the next iPhone could get a taste of it by June.
The latest rumors about Apple's flagship phone suggest that the iPhone 5 could be announced in June at Apple's next Worldwide Developers Conference. This latest report comes from analysts at Daiwa Securities as reported by the Chinese newspaper Commercial Times.
The folks at 9to5Mac are predicting that WWDC will be held from June 10 to 15 this year.
The new scuttlebut follows a recent report from 9to5Mac also pointing to a summer release for the next iPhone. Citing a "reliable source at Foxconn in China," the Apple blog site said that samples of the iPhone 5 are already "floating around" Apple. The new phone reportedly will sport a 4-inch or larger display, with a form factor that differs from the iPhone 4 and 4S in both length and width.

If true, it means Apple will be returning to its usual schedule of unveiling the new iPhone in June. Last year marked an change of pace with the iPhone 4S not reaching the market until October.
The iPhone 5, as presumably it will be called this time around, will continue to use the current glass-to-glass touch panel technology, according to the Daiwa analysts, benefiting Apple's touch panel suppliers, including TPK Holding and Wintek.
People who bought the iPhone 4 in June of 2010 will of course be eligible to grab the iPhone 5 this time around. But those of you who went for the iPhone 4S last October will either have to wait or break your contract to pick up Apple's next-gen phone.






Bail denied again for MegaUpload's Kim DotCom


Kim DotCom, the colorful and controversial founder of cyberlocker service MegaUpload, must remain in police custody for at least three more weeks, a New Zealand court decided today.
DotCom, 38, and a half dozen of MegaUpload's managers are accused in the United States of criminal copyright violations, money laundering, and racketeering. According to the indictment filed against them in Virginia, the government alleges that MegaUpload was a criminal enterprise that banked more than $175 million by helping the masses pirate films, music, software, and videogames.
At the request of the FBI, DotCom and three other MegaUpload employees were arrested at his home near Auckland last month. An extradition hearing is scheduled for February 22. DotCom and the other defendants say they have broken no laws.
A lower court last week had denied DotCom's request to be freed on bail and he appealed. The district court that heard the appeal agreed with the earlier decision that there was little to tie DotCom to New Zealand.
The court cited his history of fleeing Germany when he was accused of insider trading nearly 10 years ago (he was later found guilty but given probation). New Zealand police also assert that he resisted arrest. When officers raided his home, DotCom allegedly locked himself in a safe room and refused to come out even after they identified themselves as police. In addition, DotCom was found with a semi-automatic shotgun that was sawed-off, and gun experts in that country say that is an illegal firearm. He was also in possession of passports and credit cards in other names.
The judge in the case noted that if allowed out on bail, it is possible that DotCom still possesses the resources to make it back to Germany and avoid prosecution. Germany doesn't have an extradition treaty with the United States.
DotCom, who was born Kim Schmitz, took the stand in his own defense and denied he had the ability or motivation to leave the country. He said the police have frozen all his assets but more importantly, he wants to fight the charges, clear himself, and get his money back.
After the decision was announced, DotCom's U.S. lawyer, Ira Rothken, called the ruling a "big injustice" in a Twitter post. He has called the government's accusations against MegaUpload "flimsy."
DotCom, a former hacker and street racer, has been a well-known personality on the Internet for a decade. He was convicted for hacking and later insider trading in his native Germany. He once offered a massive reward for any information on the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden.
Paul Davison, Kim DotCom's lawyer,
 told reporters outsidethe courthouse that his 
client is disappointed with the court's
 decision to deny him bail.


He was photographed partying on yachts with topless women and celebrities. Nothing, however, added to his fame more than MegaUpload, the service that enabled users to store electronic files but was often used to pirate copyrighted films and other media.
For a while, the company's traffic was in the same league with YouTube's and was among the top 25 most visited sites. The government alleges that DotCom built a massive following by offering free, pirated movies while dressing up the service as legitimate.
During his testimony, DotCom said he was beaten by police during his arrest and that he was contacted while he was in custody by someone who claimed to be a prosecutor. The man told him for a fee, he could guarantee DotCom's release.
Following the judge's decision, Paul Davison, DotCom's lawyer in New Zealand, said that DotCom would have to stay in jail until the extradition hearing unless he decides to appeal again or new information surfaces.




AMD spells out Windows 8 tablet strategy

So, does AMD have a solid Windows 8 tablet strategy this year? I'll let the reader decide, but AMD needs to be extra aggressive on the power-efficient chip front because it's not just an Intel-AMD fight now.



 Windows 8 will bring ARM chip players like Texas Instruments, Qualcomm, Nvidia, and Freescale into the market, presenting AMD with plenty of heavyweight Windows competition.
Earlier in the week, I spoke with John Taylor, director of client product marketing and software at AMD, who cited two major chip designs for tablets, Hondo (2012) and Temash (2013). AMD now calls its chips APUs or Accelerated Processor Units because they integrate both the central processing unit (CPU) and the graphics processing unit (GPU).
To get a better insight into AMD's position in the small computing device market, I first asked him about the company's smartphone strategy. At the moment, AMD has little interest in smartphones, according to Taylor. Intel announced an aggressive strategy for smartphones at CES based on partnerships with Lenovo and Motorola.
Q: Before we go to Windows 8, what is your smartphone strategy, if any?
Taylor: The smartphone market is eight, nine, ten, maybe a dozen players. [They have] lower ASPs (average selling price), lower [profit] margins, different competitive dynamic. So, there is no shift on the smartphone strategy.
And Window 8?
Taylor: But you will see much more focus on tablets, the convertible or hybrid devices that fit between tablets and notebooks, very thin [designs].
What chips exactly will get you there?
Taylor: For tablets, it will decidedly be the Hondo chip. We're acknowledging that we still have a couple of watts to shave off to really be a more ideal tablet platform (to achieve optimal power efficiency). But we think that Temash gets us much, much closer to that in 2013. Hondo will also allow us to get into fanless clamshells (a more traditional ultrathin laptop).
(Note: Intel's Windows 8 tablet strategy will based on an Atom chip codenamed Clover Trail.)
And Windows 8 convertibles?
A 17-watt [power consumption] is the lowest that we'll offer. That's called Trinity. It will be unmatched in that [17-watt design] space. Discrete graphics-like performance. All types of dedicated video processing capabilities, better battery life than the competition. And all of these ways that we're driving the new generation of accelerated applications. If you think about the Web apps that are being built for Win 8, using HTML5 and the graphics engine that drives that higher level experience.
(Note: 17-watt refers to the same power envelope as Intel-based ultrabooks. The Hondo tablet-centric chips are 4.5 watts. The Temash chip is expected to be more power efficient.)
AMD mobile roadmap for 2012.
My take-away from Taylor's comments is that AMD will make a big play for the Windows 8 convertible and ultrathin laptop market. And already-existing Windows 7 laptops from companies like Hewlett-Packard and Acer demonstrate that AMD can compete effectively in that price-sensitive compact laptop market.





Kelihos botnet makes a comeback

A once-dead botnet has been resurrected and resumed its spamming ways.
The original Kelihos botnet compromised only about 41,000 computers but was capable of sending 3.8 billion spam e-mails each day promoting unregulated pharmaceuticals, fraudulent stock scams and, in some cases, sites dealing with sexual exploitation of children. Microsoft and Kaspersky Lab took down the malware last September using a "sinkhole" technique that tricked the infected computers into getting their instructions from a computer the companies controlled.
However, while the technique was effective at disabling the botnet quickly, it was merely a temporary fix as many computers remained infected, and "as this particular case showed, it is not very effective if the botnet's masters are still at large," Kaspersky Lab's Maria Garnaeva said in a blog post. "Our investigation revealed that the new version appeared as early as September 28, right after Microsoft and Kaspersky Lab announced the neutralization of the original Hlux/Kelihos botnet."
Now the computers have been infected with new variants that use updated encryption methods and algorithms to mask communications, Garnaeva said.
"Two different RSA keys are used within a tree which makes us think that probably two different groups are in possession of each key and are currently controlling the botnet," Garnaeva explains.
The re-emergence of the botnet comes two weeks after Microsoft filed an amended complaint in a civil suit that accused Andrey N. Sabelnikov, a resident of St. Petersburg, Russia, of writing the code for and participating in the creation of the Kelihos malware. Sabelnikov told the BBC that he was "surprised and shocked" by Microsoft's allegation and that he was "absolutely not guilty."






Google now scanning Android apps for malware

Google has added an automated scanning process that is designed to keep malicious apps out of the Android Market, the company announced today.
The new service, code-named "Bouncer," scans apps for known malware, spyware, and Trojans, and looks for suspicious behaviors and compares them against previously analyzed apps, Hiroshi Lockheimer, vice president of engineering on the Android team, said in an interview with CNET this morning.
Every app is then run on Google's cloud infrastructure to simulate how the software would operate on an Android device, he said. Existing apps are continuously analyzed, too.
"The system takes an app that's been uploaded and runs it in the cloud and monitors what the app is doing in a virtual environment, if you will," Lockheimer said.
If malicious code or behavior is detected, the app is flagged for manual confirmation that it is malware. The app could be blocked from being uploaded if it is blatantly malicious or will be removed quickly thereafter if it gets flagged by the scanning process. "It won't get uploaded at all if it is an instance of known malware," Lockheimer said.
Unlike Apple, which vets every iPhone app before it hits the iTunes Marketplace, Google does not require pre-approval for Android apps. Instead, it does the screening of the apps behind the scenes when the developers upload them to the Android Market.
Google also is analyzing new developer accounts to "prevent malicious and repeat-offending developers from coming back," the company says in a blog post today.
Google has been quietly testing Bouncer for a "number of months," long enough to see an impact, Lockheimer said. Between the first and second half of 2011 there was a 40 percent decline in the number of downloads of potentially malicious apps, the company said.
Lockheimer said he could not say how many malicious apps had been blocked or removed from the market as a result of the scanning.
Asked if Google created Bouncer in response to complaints about malicious apps on the Android Market, Lockheimer said no. "It's not like there is a rampant malware problem," he said. "Think of it as an insurance policy...to ensure that Android continues to be a safe place."
Mobile security firm Lookout found that there were about 1,000 malicious Android apps last year, but the vast majority were on unofficial, third-party sites where anything goes. But some malicious apps have made it to the Android Market, including about two dozen apps containing malware that Google yanked in May and nearly 60 malicious apps removed in March.

It's likely Bouncer will flag apps that may not technically be considered malware but are designed to perpetrate fraud against the consumer. This would include situations such as the nearly 30 fraud-related apps Google pulled from the market in December that were found to be charging premium SMS toll rates on European phones without the user's knowledge.
Asked to comment on this, a Google spokesman said "We look for many things, this may be one of them."
The news was met with praise by security experts, including some who wondered why Android apps weren't scanned from the beginning.
"I think it is great that Google is taking steps to address the inevitability of malicious apps in their app store. What were they thinking at first?" said Chris Wysopal, chief technology officer at application security provider Veracode, who had called on Google to scan Android apps in March of last year.
. "Both Apple and Microsoft started their app stores with a validation process. Blocking known malware patterns is a no-brainer."
"I hope Google can keep up with published rootkit code and research on vulnerabilities and add these patterns to their scanners," he added. "The process should be proactive and not have a window of time when tens or hundreds of thousands of mobile users can be compromised before the malware is detected and removed."
Kevin Mahaffey, chief technology officer at Lookout, said Google's move was a "step in the right direction."
"We think it is great that Google is working with the Android community to provide an alternative to a manual curation process, allowing developers to innovate quickly while also increasing the baseline level of security for Android users," he said.





Tiny monitor tracks vital signs sans skin contact

Scientists and engineers have built a monitor that tracks heart rate, respiration, and movement--without requiring direct contact with skin.


The "life and activity" monitor, developed at Oregon State University, is wearable and non-invasive. The team worked with researchers at the University of California at San Diego to develop a noncontact sensor that is essentially an electric field sensor for tracking the heart rate through materials such as clothing.
The sensor also includes a 5-axis inertial measurement unit that allows for ongoing and simultaneous monitoring of movement, heart rate, and respiration. Imagine adhering such a device to your pants instead of wearing yet another arm or wrist band that's trying to resemble a watch.
The researchers, who reported on their emerging tech this week, say the next step is to continue to miniaturize a device that is already just two inches wide--ultimately taking the form of, say, a disposable bandage prescribed by a doctor for a few weeks of continuous monitoring.
"When this technology becomes more miniaturized and so low cost that it could almost be disposable, it will see more widespread adoption," said Patrick Chiang, an assistant professor of computer engineering at OSU, in the school release. "It's already been used in one clinical research study on the effects of micronutrients on aging, and monitoring of this type should have an important future role in medicine."






Bright idea: Charging cables light up as current flows




I have "a friend" (who is no way whatsoever me, no sir, mm-mm) who recently got so excited about her new smartphone case she couldn't stop looking at it for days. Point being that accessories can hugely boost one's enthusiasm for gadgets, even the most humdrum ones.
Take these Dexim Visible Green illuminated charging cables that use electroluminescent (EL) technology to display the current flow from the power socket to your device. They function like any other charging cable, but they do it with such pizzazz that you (and by "you," I mean "me") can't help but feel energized watching them. Suddenly, charging a smartphone feels like going to a rave.
The speed of the lights varies depending on your charging needs; the lower the battery the faster the visible current moves, slowing when your gadget reaches 65 percent. Once a device is fully charged, the glowing stops and the charger goes into power-saving automatic standby mode.
A Visible Green charging system for iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch (folding AC plug plus cable in purple, dark blue, light blue, or green) goes for $35, with the cable alone selling for $20. A 2.6-foot charge and sync cable compatible with most smartphones sporting a micro USB charging port costs about the same.