Sunday, May 23, 2010

Rogue Facebook apps launch 'beach babes' attack


Second weekend in a row Facebook users have had to fend off major malware attacks

Computerworld - Another attack using rogue Facebook  applications hit users' PCs Saturday in a virtual repeat of last weekend's massive assault, security researchers said. Like the earlier attack, today's scam uses a sex-oriented video as bait, said Patrik Runald, a Australian researcher who works for Websense Security.

The scam is spread through Facebook messages touting "Distracting Beach Babes" videos that include a link to the malicious applications, Runald wrote on his company's blog early Saturday. Users who click on the link are asked to allow the application to access their profiles, and let it send messages to friends and post it on their walls. Once approved, the application instructs users to download an updated version of FLV Player, a popular free Windows media player, to view the video.

This new attack is almost identical to the one that generated several hundred thousand malicious software reports to antivirus vendor AVG Technologies a week ago. On Saturday, Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at U.K.-based security firm Sophos, put the number of attacked Facebook users in "the thousands." Neither Runald or Cluley could confirm the nature of the malware that masquerades as FLV Player, but both suspected that because of the similarity to last week's attack, it was most likely the result of the notorious Hotbar adware, a toolbar that inserts itself into Internet Explorer and displays pop-up ads and links.

"I'm beginning to wonder if the cybercriminals deliberately launch these campaigns on the weekends, imagining that anti-virus researchers and Facebook's own security team might be snoozing," said Cluley on the Sophos blog Saturday.

Facebook did not reply to a request for comment Saturday, and its security page had no mention of the latest attacks.

According to Runald, Websense has identified at least 100 different malicious applications used in the two weekend attacks.

Facebook users have used the service to warn others of the ongoing attacks. "Hey guys whatever you do DO NOT click on the post that appears on your wall -- doing so will result in all of your Facebook friends being sent the virus," one such message said.

Runald and Cluley spelled out in their blog posts how users who installed the rogue Facebook software, but who did not take the final step and fall for the fake FLV Player download, can remove the bogus program from their application settings page.

Searches conducted on Facebook at 4:30 p.m. ET for the malicious application that Ronald identified came up empty, implying that Facebook had removed it from the site.

iPad rivals: Tablets, real and rumored


The iPad is popular, but it's got lots of company

With more than a million units sold in less than a month, it's pretty clear that Apple's iPad touchscreen tablet has been a success so far. But Apple isn't the only company out there to develop a tablet, as there are several iPad alternatives on the market or in the works right now that could give the iPad a run for its money
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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Intel Showcases Wireless Power Concept

Academias Complicated Version of Wireless Power Transmission 1975 NASA J...

Wireless Power Transmission

Wireless power transmission has been a dream since the days when Nikola Tesla imagined a world studded with enormous Tesla coils. But aside from advances in recharging electric toothbrushes, wireless power has so far failed to make significant inroads into consumer-level gear.

What is it? 
This summer, Intel researchers demonstrated a method--based on MIT research--for throwing electricity a distance of a few feet, without wires and without any dangers to bystanders (well, none that they know about yet). Intel calls the technology a "wireless resonant energy link," and it works by sending a specific, 10-MHz signal through a coil of wire; a similar, nearby coil of wire resonates in tune with the frequency, causing electrons to flow through that coil too. Though the design is primitive, it can light up a 60-watt bulb with 70 percent efficiency.

When is it coming? 
Numerous obstacles remain, the first of which is that the Intel project uses alternating current. To charge gadgets, we'd have to see a direct-current version, and the size of the apparatus would have to be considerably smaller. Numerous regulatory hurdles would likely have to be cleared in commercializing such a system, and it would have to be thoroughly vetted for safety concerns.

Assuming those all go reasonably well, such receiving circuitry could be integrated into the back of your laptop screen in roughly the next six to eight years. It would then be a simple matter for your local airport or even Starbucks to embed the companion power transmitters right into the walls so you can get a quick charge without ever opening up your laptop bag.