|
Latest News
|
|
Written by Admin
|
|
Tuesday, 29 May 2007 |
|
By MARK LANDLER and JOHN MARKOFF TALLINN, Estonia, May 24 — When Estonian authorities began removing a bronze statue of a World War II-era Soviet soldier from a park in this bustling Baltic seaport last month, they expected violent street protests by Estonians of Russian descent. Skip to next paragraph They also knew from experience that “if there are fights on the street, there are going to be fights on the Internet,” said Hillar Aarelaid, the director of Estonia’s Computer Emergency Response Team. After all, for people here the Internet is almost as vital as running water; it is used routinely to vote, file their taxes, and, with their cellphones, to shop or pay for parking. What followed was what some here describe as the first war in cyberspace, a monthlong campaign that has forced Estonian authorities to defend their pint-size Baltic nation from a data flood that they say was set off by orders from Russia or ethnic Russian sources in retaliation for the removal of the statue. The Estonians assert that an Internet address involved in the attacks belonged to an official who works in the administration of Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin. The Russian government has denied any involvement in the attacks, which came close to shutting down the country’s digital infrastructure, clogging the Web sites of the president, the prime minister, Parliament and other government agencies, staggering Estonia’s biggest bank and overwhelming the sites of several daily newspapers. “It turned out to be a national security situation,” Estonia’s defense minister, Jaak Aaviksoo, said in an interview. “It can effectively be compared to when your ports are shut to the sea.” Computer security experts from NATO, the European Union, the United States and Israel have since converged on Tallinn to offer help and to learn what they can about cyberwar in the digital age. “This may well turn out to be a watershed in terms of widespread awareness of the vulnerability of modern society,” said Linton Wells II, the principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for networks and information integration at the Pentagon. “It has gotten the attention of a lot of people.” The authorities anticipated there would be a backlash to the removal of the statue, which had become a rallying point for Estonia’s large Russian-speaking minority, particularly as it was removed to a less accessible military graveyard. When the first digital intruders slipped into Estonian cyberspace at 10 p.m. on April 26, Mr. Aarelaid figured he was ready. He had erected firewalls around government Web sites, set up extra computer servers and put his staff on call for a busy week. By April 29, Tallinn’s streets were calm again after two nights of riots caused by the statue’s removal, but Estonia’s electronic Maginot Line was crumbling. In one of the first strikes, a flood of junk messages was thrown at the e-mail server of the Parliament, shutting it down. In another, hackers broke into the Web site of the Reform Party, posting a fake letter of apology from the prime minister, Andrus Ansip, for ordering the removal of the highly symbolic statue. At that point, Mr. Aarelaid, a former police officer, gathered security experts from Estonia’s Internet service providers, banks, government agencies and the police. He also drew on contacts in Finland, Germany, Slovenia and other countries to help him track down and block suspicious Internet addresses and halt traffic from computers as far away as Peru and China. Recommend this article... |
|
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 29 May 2007 )
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Latest News
|
|
Written by Admin
|
|
Wednesday, 28 March 2007 |
|
by Preston Gralla, author of Windows XP Hacks
These days, the simple act of sharing music files with like-minded others can
make you feel like a hunted criminal, never sure when the virtual bloodhounds of the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) may track you down and drag you
into court, demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines. After all, it's happened to
grandparents, 14-year-olds, college students, and just plain folks. Why can't it happen to you?
You may or may not agree with what the law says about sharing
copyrighted files -- in essence, that it's illegal to share them with,
or download them from, others. And I'm certainly not advocating that
anyone should go out and break the law. But if you do decide to
continue sharing files despite the potential legal problems, there are
some things you can do to make it unlikely that the RIAA will target
you. In this article, we'll look at ways you can continue to share
music and other files using file-sharing software, without fear.
In order to avoid getting onto the RIAA's radar, you first need to know how the
RIAA tracks file sharers, and how the organization has decided in the past who it should
take to court. In early September, the RIAA sued 261 people who it claims illegally
shared music files over the Internet. The RIAA warned at the time that that action could
be the "first wave of what could ultimately be thousands of civil lawsuits."
But 261 people out of approximately 60 million users of peer-to-peer
software is not even a drop in the bucket -- it's barely a drop in the
ocean. So how did the RIAA decide who would be the unlucky ones to be
sued? And are there ways you can protect yourself from future lawsuits?
Read on to find out.
Size Matters
When it comes to file sharing, size matters. The RIAA sued only people who
shared at least 1,000 songs. That may change in the future, but for now, the RIAA is
going after only those with the largest song collections. This means that if you keep your
music collection relatively small, you're less likely to be targeted by the music industry
enforcers. So cull your collection to only what you really want to keep, or move the files to a non-shared
folder.
The RIAA sued only those who made their own files available to others, not those
who only downloaded them. So, for example, if someone downloaded files, but didn't
allow others to download from their collection, the RIAA left them alone. This means that
you're safer if you don't share files on your system with other file sharers. In Kazaa, you
can turn file sharing off by unchecking the "Share Files in My Shared Folder" box on the
Sharing tab. If you use Kazaa Lite, a far superior program, available from
www.kazaalite.tk, choose
Options->Kazaa Lite K++ Options->Traffic, and check the box next
to "Disable sharing of files with other users," as shown in Figure 1.
More Options
Another solution: after you download music, move the files out of the
folder you designated as your shared music folder. If that folder is
empty, you won't appear to be sharing files.
Related Reading
Windows XP Hacks
Windows XP Hacks
100 Industrial-Strength Tips & Tools
By Preston Gralla
Table of Contents
Index
Read Online--Safari Search this book on Safari:
Code Fragments only
This leads to a philosophical conundrum, though. If everyone stops
sharing their files, file sharing will die. And the whole point of file
sharing is the community atmosphere that it creates. So another option
is to run file-sharing software only when you're downloading files, and
not leave it running all the time. This way, your shared folder and
music will only be available a small portion of the day, and you'll be
less likely a target.
As part of its investigations, the RIAA (in essence) took a snapshot of
all of the files in people's shared music folders, and used that
information to help decide whether to prosecute. If you want to prevent
that from happening to you, you can prevent anyone, including the RIAA,
from seeing all of the files in your folder. If you have Kazaa Lite,
choose Options->Kazaa Lite K++ Options->K++ Options, and check
the box next to "Users can't get a list of all your shared files." In
Kazaa, on the Sharing tab, choose Add/Manage Other Folders and then
uncheck the check box next to your shared folder, and it won't be
shared.
Who Is a Likely RIAA Target?
According to CNet's News.com, the RIAA, in doing investigations for its
round of lawsuits, used automated tools that scanned file sharers'
folders for a short list of music files, and when it found one of those
files, it targeted that user for further investigation. The entire list
of music files has not been made available, but according to CNet, the
following files were cited in some of the lawsuits:
* Bobby McFerrin, "Don't Worry, Be Happy"
* Thompson Twins, "Hold Me Now"
* Eagles, "Hotel California"
* George Michael, "Kissing A Fool"
* Paula Abdul, "Knocked Out"
* Green Day, "Minority"
* UB40, "Red, Red Wine"
* Ludacris "Area Codes"
* Marvin Gaye, "Sexual Healing"
* Avril Lavigne, "Complicated"
So if you share popular music, you're more likely to be a target. If,
on the other hand, you share digital music such as the songs of Brahms
and Liszt sung by the baritone Thomas Quasthoff, you're not likely to
become a target.
Finally, Kazaa Lite offers a feature for protecting your privacy as
well. This feature blocks the RIAA and those who work for it from being
able to connect to your PC. If they can't connect, they can't see your
files, and you won't be targeted. To enable this feature in Kazaa Lite,
choose Options->Kazaa Lite K++ Options->K++ Options, and check
the box next to "Block bad IP ranges," as shown in Figure 2. This will
block addresses known to be working for the RIAA from connecting to
your PC. The list is updated regularly, but be forewarned that it isn't
foolproof.

Figure 2: You can block IP addresses known to be associated with the RIAA from connecting to your PC.
Conclusion
If you're a music hound like me, this article should help you continue
sharing music files while also flying under the RIAA radar. Keep in
mind, though, that things can change, so these steps do not guarantee
the RIAA won't come calling someday. But in the meantime, you can still
enjoy listening to your downloaded digital music.
If you want more advice on ripping and burning digital music, check out
two hacks in my book Windows XP Hacks: Hack #87, "Problem-Free CD
Burning," and Hack #88, "Save Streaming Music to Your PC." And, of
course, if you're looking for other ways to get more out of XP, you'll
find that help in there as well.
Recommend this article... |
|
|
Latest News
|
|
Written by Admin
|
|
Tuesday, 20 March 2007 |
|
Personal information relating to 8.63 million customers was stolen
by a former employee of a firm contracted by Dai Nippon Printing Co in
the largest information leak of its kind.
The
data including credit card numbers, were provided to Dai Nippon by 43
companies, "including credit card issuers and insurance firms" and,
"some of which have reportedly been used in fraudulent Internet
transactions," says The Yomiuri Shimbun.
But,
"The employee in question was arrested by the Metropolitan Police
Department and indicted on theft charges, in which damages amount to a
mere 250--the cost of the magneto-optical (MO) disk he used for copying
the information," says an OpEd, calling for a revisions in Japan's
adding personal information protection law.
Penalties "do
not apply against individuals, such as company employees, who steal
information," says the post. "At the time of the law's enactment,
observers pointed out this loophole."
An employee took an
MO disk from the office supplies, "making it possible for the police to
charge him with theft under the Penal Code," says The Yomiuri Shimbun.
"If the man had copied the data to his own disk, the police would have had difficulty bringing theft charges against him."
Recommend this article... |
|
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 20 March 2007 )
|
|
| | << Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>
| | Results 37 - 40 of 56 |
|