Monday, October 3, 2011

HP completes buy-out of Autonomy

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Hewlett-Packard has completed the $12bn (�7.8bn) buy-out of UK software firm Autonomy, despite the departure of the man who initiated it.

Leo Apotheker was replaced as HP chief executive last month amid falling sales and a share price collapse.

The Autonomy deal was part of a massive overhaul of the troubled US computer giant unveiled by Mr Apotheker.

But plans to spin off its core PC business received a thumbs down from the market.

HP's shares have fallen 47% this year, making it one of the worst performers in the Dow Jones index of leading US companies.

The purchase price for Autonomy was also widely criticised by market analysts as too high, but British takeover rules made it almost impossible to cancel the bid.

Meg Whitman, the former head of eBay who replaced Mr Apotheker, said shortly after her appointment that the deal would still go ahead.

The UK firm's head, Mike Lynch, later got into a colourful spat with HP rival Oracle, who claimed that Mr Lynch had sought a rival bid from them and been declined.

Oracle's chief executive Larry Ellison described the asking price as "absurdly high".

HP's shares closed 1.1% lower on Monday, outperforming the wider market.



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BT suffers major broadband outage

BT has confirmed that a "power failure" at a major exchange in Birmingham is causing problems for broadband customers across the UK.

Customers have reported problems from as far afield as Belfast, Edinburgh, Swansea and London.

Many users have taken to Twitter to complain that the company is not answering its helpline.

BT has told the BBC it has been made aware of the issue and is working hard to get information to customers.

In a statement, the company said: "We can confirm that, as a result of a power failure at one of our major exchanges, some customers may currently be experiencing loss of broadband service.

"Our engineers are on-site and the majority of customers' service has already been restored. We are working to restore service to remaining customers as soon as possible this afternoon.

"Should any customers continue to experience difficulty in accessing their broadband service, they are advised to turn their Hub or modem off and on again."

The outage has affected both business and home customers.

Carl in Bedford contacted the BBC, saying: "We have lost both our business lines at work and causing us lots of lost revenue as we can no longer do our scheduled remote work on our customer sites.

"It is shocking that a small power issue 150 miles away in Birmingham can have such a huge affect on business customers elsewhere."

Other users reported problems in many other places including Cambridge, Brentford, Wolverhampton and Cornwall.



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Facebook adds phishing safety net

Facebook have stepped up their battle against phishing and malware scammers by partnering with security firm Websense.

As of next week, users will be warned if they are about to be taken to a malicious website.

The social network has suffered to date as many of its 700 million users unwittingly click on dangerous links supposedly posted by their friends.

Such attacks usually trick users into sharing passwords or data.

Facebook already tells users if they are about to visit an external site, but the current set up makes no distinction between friendly and dangerous sites.

The new technology will present a warning screen whenever it suspects a page poses a threat to the users, giving details of the risk.

From here, users are encouraged to return to the previous page.

If they wish, users can continue to the intended page, albeit very much at their own risk.

'Profitable target'

Both Facebook and Websense will hope the extra measures will be enough to deter potential scammers from focusing their efforts on the network.

Scams regularly catch out hundreds of thousands of users at a time.

"Start Quote

As more of these 'friend in the middle' attacks happen, you start to trust your friends less."

End Quote Spencer Parker Websense

"There's over 700 million users on Facebook," Websense's Spencer Parker told the BBC.

"As a piece of real estate, it's extremely profitable to be targeted by malware writers."

The protection will be powered by Websense's "Threatseeker Cloud", a system which stores a database of known malicious URLs.

The system can also detect unknown dangerous URLs by assessing threats in real-time.

This means harmful URLs can be blocked even before they are known to the company - cutting off a key tactic used by phishers in which constantly changing URLs fool database-driven protection.

In addition, the system will "follow" links made using popular URL shorteners - such as bit.ly and ow.ly - to verify their safety.

Due to the nature of how we interact with our friends, Mr Parker says phishing attacks on Facebook are much harder to prevent than other commonly used techniques.

"One of the things with Facebook, of course, is that you have that element of trust in a social network. If one of your friends posts something, you automatically trust it more than if it just received as a spam email.

"As more of these 'friend in the middle' attacks happen, you start to trust your friends less."



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HTC &#39;investigating&#39; security flaw

HTC is investigating claims that a security flaw in several of its mobile phones means personal information is being exposed.

The Android Police blog says a file containing a user's GPS location and email addresses can be easily accessed once internet permissions are granted.

Several models are said to be affected, including EVO 3D, EVO 4G, Thunderbolt and potentially the Sensation range.

HTC said it is looking into the claims "as quickly as possible".

"HTC takes our customers' security very seriously, and we are working to investigate this claim as quickly as possible," the company said in a statement.

"We will provide an update as soon as we're able to determine the accuracy of the claim and what steps, if any, need to be taken."

Systems administrator Trevor Eckhart produced a proof of concept app designed to show off the vulnerability.

By simply asking a user's permission to access the internet - a request popular with games apps seeking to post scores online - the app was able to access a file named "HtcLoggers.apk".

"Start Quote

It's like leaving your keys under the mat and expecting nobody who finds them to unlock the door"

End Quote Artem Russakovskii Android Police blog

The file contained several key pieces of personal information, including:

  • The list of user accounts, including email addresses
  • A log of recent GPS locations
  • Phone numbers taken from recent call logs
  • SMS data, including recent numbers and encoded messages

The Android Police blog described the risk as "like leaving your keys under the mat and expecting nobody who finds them to unlock the door".

Rik Ferguson, director of security research and communications at Trend Micro, believes the risk should be an easy one to solve.

"It sounds like something very simple to patch," he told the BBC.

"They didn't anticipate that kind of information would be of interest. It's a lack of foresight rather than lax programming, I think. It should be something relatively easy to fix."



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Samsung hobbles tablet to end row

Samsung has offered to remove some features from its Galaxy Tab 10.1 as it seeks to overturn a court-imposed sales ban in Australia.

The ban on sales was sought by Apple which claims the tablet copies many of the iPad's patented features.

Samsung has also reportedly made an offer to settle the dispute between the two firms so it can get on and launch the tablet in Australia.

Apple said it needed time to consider the merit of Samsung's proposals.

By removing and changing features Samsung is trying to end its wrangle with Apple outside the Sydney court overseeing the dispute.

The two sides will return to court on 4 October. However, If Apple accepts the settlement offer the court case could halt and the Tab might be launched soon after.

Apple sought the initial injunction to stop the launch of the Galaxy and then asked the court to rule on whether Samsung has violated its patents.

The initial claim made by Apple mentioned 13 separate patents. However, Samsung has progressively taken out or altered functions to avoid infringing Apple's intellectual property. Now the dispute centres around only three patents.

Samsung originally intended to launch the Galaxy tablet in Australia on 11 August. This was delayed by the injunction and was scheduled for 30 September. However, the ongoing court dispute has delayed it again.

The legal row in Australia is one of many that Apple and Samsung have started around the world. They currently face each other in courts in the US, Germany and the Netherlands.



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