Skype security flaw allows location tracking | TG Daily

A glaring security flaw’s been uncovered in Skype and other VoIP systems, potentially allowing hackers to access users’ identities, locations and even files.

Skype claims more than a half-billion registered users, and one report suggests that one in five overseas calls is made using the service.

But researchers headed by a team at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University say that Skype can be used to track not only users’ locations over time but also their peer-to-peer file-sharing activity. It works even when a user’s blocked callers or used a Network Address Translation (NAT) firewall.

And having done this, says the team, it’s easy to link to information such as name, age, address, profession and employer using social media sites such as Facebook and LinkedIn in order to build profiles on a single tracked target or a database of hundreds of thousands.

“These findings have real security implications for the hundreds of millions of people around the world who use VoIP or P2P file-sharing services,” says Keith Ross of NYU-Poly.

“A hacker anywhere in the world could easily track the whereabouts and file-sharing habits of a Skype user – from private citizens to celebrities and politicians – and use the information for purposes of stalking, blackmail or fraud.”

via Skype security flaw allows location tracking | TG Daily.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Infographic: Most Tablet Users Are Educated, Employed, Not Young | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

Tablet users are educated, employed, and earning money but are not necessarily young, according to new data.

At this point, 11 percent of Americans have a tablet device and 77 percent of them use it daily. Approximately 46 percent are in the 30 to 49 age bracket, however, and they are serious about their news, according to an infographic produced by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism and The Economist Group.

Of the 1,200 tablet owners polled by Pew, 53 percent use their device to access news every day. Getting news is actually almost as popular as email, at 54 percent compared to 53 percent, and the average user spends about 90 minutes catching up on the day’s events.

It’s not just quick bursts of breaking news users are reading, however. About 42 percent read in-depth articles on their tablets, but despite social-networking linkups at every turn, just 16 percent share what they’re reading on those services. Most stick to a small number of recognized sources, though 33 percent said they have branched out to new publications on their tablets.

via Infographic: Most Tablet Users Are Educated, Employed, Not Young | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Why people still use BlackBerry: keyboards, security, and IT requirements

It’s no secret Research In Motion has lost its once-dominant position in the smartphone world. Despite slight increases in sales, BlackBerry market share has plummeted in percentage terms compared to the surging iPhone and Android, falling from 18.7 percent to 11.7 percent in the second quarter. After a recent outage left RIM’s back-end systems inconsistent and unresponsive for parts of four days, we argued that RIM is destined for an eventual demise, hastened by the consumerization of IT. As long as the iPhone and Android are good enough to meet corporate IT requirements, consumer choices will erode RIM’s last area of strength: the enterprise.

But not everyone agrees that RIM’s situation is as dire as it appears on first glance, and indeed some people prefer BlackBerrys. After all, the company has 70 million subscribers. To get a sense of what RIM’s appeal is in the iPhone and Android age, we decided to talk to some users and an enterprise smartphone management vendor that handles mobile deployments of all types. Some of Ars’ Twitter followers told us they only use BlackBerrys because their employers won’t allow other devices, and blamed corporate “inertia.” But it’s also true that some people just prefer the BlackBerry form factor, BlackBerry Messenger is well-liked, and RIM is still ahead of the competition in satisfying the unique requirements of highly regulated industries.

“It’s premature to run the obituaries on RIM,” says Dan Croft, CEO of Mission Critical Wireless, which helps businesses manage mobile deployments. “Clearly they are facing some significant issues, but there are still millions and millions of BlackBerrys out there that are operating just fine. That being said, what we’re typically seeing is not RIM getting ripped out of an enterprise environment. We’re just seeing the addition of non-BlackBerry devices.”

via Why people still use BlackBerry: keyboards, security, and IT requirements.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Google agrees to privacy audits for 20 years – chicagotribune.com

Google Inc. agreed to submit to third-party privacy audits for the next 20 years to settle allegations it misused users’ personal information.

The settlement with the Federal Trade Commission would resolve the agency’s complaint over Google Buzz, a social notification service the company built last year into Gmail. The feature allowed users to share photos, videos and updates with friends but attracted controversy when the automatically enabled service effectively made users’ email contacts public.

Under the proposed settlement, Google would prominently disclose when it transfers user information to third parties, identify the kind of third parties receiving the data and explain the purposes of sharing the data. The disclosures would come apart from the company’s standard end-user license agreement.

The agreement also requires biennial assessments of its privacy safeguards by an independent third-party professional.

via Google agrees to privacy audits for 20 years – chicagotribune.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Poor Email Mgt Risks Legal Action, Study Warns | eWEEK Europe UK

Poor email management by firms is risking legal consequences a majority of workers believe

A survey from software developer Oasys has revealed 96 percent of employees believe their companies face possible legal risks associated with poor email management.

Indeed, one in five workers stated that their company faces “high risk”, according to the survey of 1,237 employees.

The findings were part of the company’s September 2011 Business Behaviour & Email Management Project, which show that time constraints during the e-discovery process are indeed a major factor.

Lost Emails

The survey revealed that more than a third of business professionals are losing 2 hours or more every day searching for emails that are hard to find. Thirty-four percent of employees surveyed said they spend on average up to 2 hours a day searching for emails, while 8.4 percent spend up to 3 hours a day in the process.

“What most companies don’t understand are the costly challenges associated with having a disorganised email system in the event of litigation,” said attorney Joseph Dennis. “In some cases we’ve seen companies fined by regulatory agencies as much as $700,000 (£439,000) for not being able to produce specific emails under very tight timeframes imposed by the courts during the e-discovery process.”

With the volume of email set to increase, the problem is projected to get much worse, the Oasys study suggested. According to a report by The Radicati Group, a technology market research firm, the number of email users is estimated to rise to 1.9 billion by 2013, and many companies have still failed to implement effective solutions to handle the constantly increasing volumes.

via Poor Email Mgt Risks Legal Action, Study Warns | eWEEK Europe UK.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

The Big Business of ‘Big Data’ – NYTimes.com

Is Big Data a Bubble?

In case you’re in a hurry: Of course it is. And that is good.

Longer version: Last week there were several events that convinced me that one of the great tech bubbles inflating right now is around what people have agreed to call “Big Data.” Basically the term reflects the fact that its now so easy to digitize and put on the Internet all kinds of information — things as diverse as the measurements of passive sensors,  most or all the world’s books, 200 million tweets a day and most of the world’s significant financial transactions — that the data is growing enormously.

Big Data is really about, however, the benefits we will gain by cleverly sifting through it to find and exploit new patterns and relationships. You see it now in things like Facebook ads, which are put in front of you because the posts you have read and contributed to (which Facebook’s algorithms get to examine as the price of this “free” service) indicate you might be ready to buy the advertised good.

Other companies look at air and soil data to write insurance about crop production. Further out, people want to seek patterns in raw medical data for possible causes and cures for disease, bypassing much of the old hypothesis-experiment model; this article from Wired tells of how the Google co-founder Sergey Brin used this in Parkinson’s research.

Last week’s gathering of the tech tribes, the Web 2.0 conference, focused heavily on the benefits of the ubiquity of Big Data — ad placement at Google, Coca-Cola vending machines that develop a personal relationship with the buyer, or what Facebook algorithms are doing to the cultivation of our souls. Microsoft held a one-hour session for developers on all the big, reliable databases it would offer them to make new products.

via The Big Business of ‘Big Data’ – NYTimes.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Facebook could face €100,000 fine for holding data that users have deleted | The Guardian

Facebook could face a fine of up to €100,000 (£87,000) after an Austrian law student discovered the social networking site held 1,200 pages of personal data about him, much of which he had deleted.

Max Schrems, 24, decided to ask Facebook for a copy of his data in June after attending a lecture by a Facebook executive while on an exchange programme at Santa Clara University in California.

Schrems was shocked when he eventually received a CD from California containing messages and information he says he had deleted from his profile in the three years since he joined the site.

After receiving the data, Schrems decided to log a list of 22 separate complaints with the Irish data protection commissioner, which next week is to carry out its first audit of Facebook. He wrote to Ireland after discovering that European users are administered by the Irish Facebook subsidiary. A spokeswoman for the commissioner confirmed its officers would be investigating alleged breaches raised by Schrems as part of the audit. If the commissioner decides to prosecute and Facebook or any employees are found guilty of data protection breaches, the maximum penalty is a fine of €100,000.

Among the 1,200 pages of data Schrems was sent were rejected friend requests, incidences where he “defriended” someone, as well as a log of all Facebook chats he had ever had. There was also a list of photos he had detagged of himself, the names of everyone he had ever “poked”, which events he had attended, which he hadn’t replied to, and much more besides.

The information was broken down into 57 categories, including likes, log-ons (a list of when he logged on and which IP address he used) and emails, which included some email addresses Schrems had never personally uploaded to the site but which he assumes were discerned from another user’s profile.

via Facebook could face €100,000 fine for holding data that users have deleted | Technology | The Guardian.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Court Acknowledges Calls for Caution when Applying “Proportionality Test” to Preservation, Denies Motion for Protective Order : Electronic Discovery Law

Pippins v. KPMG LLP, No. 11 Civ. 0377 (CM)(JLC), 2011 WL 4701849 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 7, 2011)

KPMG sought a protective order to limit the scope of its preservation obligation or to shift a portion of its preservation costs to plaintiffs.  At the time, the parties awaited ruling on plaintiffs’ Motion to Certify and KPMG was preserving more than 2,500 hard drives at a cost of more than $1,500,000.  Following the court’s analysis, the motion was denied.

In this case, the plaintiffs, potential members of a nationwide FLSA collective and/or a putative New York State class, “challenge[d] KPMG’s treatment of certain accountants in its audit practice . . . .” Discovery was stayed pending determination of plaintiffs’ Motion to Certify.  KPMG sought a protective order to narrow the scope of its preservation obligation as to the hard drives of former and departing associates.  Specifically, KPMG sought an order that would require the preservation of only a random sample of 100 hard drives from among those it had already preserved for this and other litigation.  Alternatively, KPMG sought to shift the cost of any preservation beyond the scope it had suggested.  At the time of the motion, KPMG had already preserved more than 2,500 hard drives of Audit Associates at a cost of more than $1,500,000.  Moreover, KPMG indicated that there were more than 7,500 potential opt-in plaintiffs to the FLSA collective nationwide and more than 1,500 putative class members in New York.

Plaintiffs responded that they were amenable to using sampling as a means to limit the scope of preservation but opposed KPMG’s methodology.  Prior to the motion, the parties had engaged in extensive negotiations and mediation in an effort to reach agreement to no avail.

via Court Acknowledges Calls for Caution when Applying “Proportionality Test” to Preservation, Denies Motion for Protective Order : Electronic Discovery Law.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

eDiscovery Disasters: What Every CIO Needs to Know – IT Management

With the rising tide of regulation and litigation, it can be a challenge for CIOs to know what data the company needs to retain — and for how long — in order to protect and defend itself in the event of a legal or regulatory incident. According Symantec’s 2011 Information Retention and eDiscovery Survey, conducted by Applied Research, it’s no longer just a question of archiving your email. During the eDiscovery process, attorneys more commonly seek structured and unstructured information than they do email, the survey found. Social media and text messages also made the list of commonly requested digital records. Annie Goranson, discovery attorney at Symantec, says that knowing what to keep is critical for CIOs. “There are a lot of risks associated with keeping that data around past its useful life. It really becomes a drain on the business and on the technology that the business is using. The ability and the focus to develop a deletion policy [and] a retention policy puts the entire organization in a much better position with respect to risk. From the CIO’s perspective, that’s probably the biggest gain.” Applied Research surveyed 2,000 global enterprises with at least 1,000 employees on behalf of Symantec in June and July 2011. Respondents came from both IT management and legal departments. In addition to highlighting survey findings, we provide six steps to help you keep your organization prepared for an information request.

slideshow @  eDiscovery Disasters: What Every CIO Needs to Know – IT Management.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Las Vegas Sands Probe: Explained – Law Blog – WSJ

Since the initial news of the U.S. government’s bribery investigation into Las Vegas Sands’ Macau operations, we’ve scarcely heard a peep about it.

The casino owner and operator disclosed in March that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Justice Department were investigating whether LVS violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bars bribery of foreign officials.

FCPA aficionados know that this case holds intense interest. The government, no doubt, wants to make a splash by pegging a casino, and, in the words of the Fixx, one thing leads to another. The SEC and Justice Department rarely stop with one company in any particular industry when it comes to overseas bribery. They are likely to start looking at other casinos, if they haven’t already.

So, with that windup, WSJ’s Kate O’Keeffe has a report on an internal memo from LVS general counsel Gayle Hyman that points to a possible focus of the probe.

Hyman’s memo, reviewed by the WSJ,  instructs employees at Sands to retain documents regarding “transmission of anything of value” to current and former Macau government officials and their family members. The memo also names several Sands employees and contractors about whom documents must be preserved. Among those people is a prominent Macau lawyer who is a focus of a dispute between the company and its former chief executive for Macau.

The memo mirrors a subpoena sent by the SEC, a person familiar with the matter told the Journal.

via Las Vegas Sands Probe: Explained – Law Blog – WSJ.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare