Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Mobile firms can trade spectrum

UK regulator Ofcom has given phone operators the green light to trade spectrum in a move intended to increase mobile network capacity.

Available bandwidth is becoming a huge issue as smartphones put increasing demand on networks.

The trading of airwaves comes ahead of a crucial spectrum auction next year that will usher in 4G data services.

Both the auction and the decision to allow operators to trade existing spectrum have caused controversy.

Spectrum trading allows operators to sell off the airwaves they own in the 900MHz, 1800MHz and 2100MHz frequency bands.

Historically the 900MHz slice of spectrum has belonged exclusively to O2 and Vodafone because they were the only two mobile operators on the market when it was handed out.

While other nations have reallocated this spectrum to offer a more level-playing field ahead of 4G auctions, this has not happened in the UK.

Ofcom had originally planned to redistribute the spectrum allocated to O2 and Vodafone, but was met with a legal action, initiated by the two operators.

Lifeblood

Ofcom dropped its plans following the merger of T-Mobile and Orange.

Everything Everywhere (EE), the parent company of T-Mobile and Orange will be the biggest beneficiary of spectrum trading.

It was required to sell off about 19 percent of its spectrum frequencies as a condition of the merger.

Three is unhappy as it has the least spectrum to trade.

"Spectrum is the lifeblood of smartphones and the mobile internet and for those with surplus holdings it is also a strategic asset, so voluntary trading is the exception," it said in a statement.

"This move simply allows those who have been gifted access to public spectrum to profit from it, with no benefit for UK taxpayers."

Three will voice its concerns later today at a Department of Culture select committee hearing set up to discuss the way spectrum is being allocated.

Further delays

O2 and Vodafone are unlikely to sell off any of their assets, according to Mr Howett.

"It is simply too valuable to them and they would only trade it if they were forced to," he said.

What may force their hand is the upcoming 4G auction in which Ofcom has set caps on the amount that can be bought.

It will mean the operators with more existing spectrum will be able to buy less of the more valuable 4G airwaves.

Ofcom has also ring-fenced some of the spectrum for new entrants such as Three.

"It has done this because it recognised that 3 might not be able to survive and it values the disruptive nature of a player like 3," said Mr Howett.

But O2 said it was tantamount to "state aid" and has threatened legal action.

Any further delays to the auction could put the UK behind other European countries in the roll-out of 4G services, said Mr Howett.

4G will be crucial as the market continues to grow.

According to Ofcom there are now 80 million mobiles in the UK, 12.8 million of which are smartphones.



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Monday, June 20, 2011

LulzSec attacks UK crime agency

Hacking group Lulz Security has said it was responsible for taking offline the website of the UK Serious Organised Crime agency (Soca).

Www.soca.gov.uk was unavailable on Monday afternoon, with an intermittent service restored later in the day.

As the agency launched an investigation, LulzSec tweeted: "Tango down - in the name of #AntiSec".

The group has hit a number of high-profile websites in recent weeks, including the CIA and US Senate.

Soca appeared to be the victim of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, where a number of computers, under malicious control, overload their target with web requests.

A later LulzSec twitter posting seemed to confirm that.

"DDoS is of course our least powerful and most abundant ammunition. Government hacking is taking place right now behind the scenes," it said.

Over the weekend, the shadowy organisation declared that it would begin targeting government systems, calling the campaign Antisec.

In an online posting, LulzSec set out its agenda: "Top priority is to steal and leak any classified government information, including e-mail spools and documentation. Prime targets are banks and other high-ranking establishments."



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Web primed for domain name surge

A global internet body has voted to allow the creation of new website domain suffixes, the biggest change for the online world in years.

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) plans to dramatically increase the number of domain endings from the current 22.

Internet address names will end with almost any word and be in any language.

Icann will begin taking applications next year, with corporations and cities expected to be among the first.

"Icann has opened the internet's addressing system to the limitless possibilities of the human imagination," said Rod Beckstrom, president and chief executive officer for Icann.

"No one can predict where this historic decision will take us."

There will be several hundred new generic top-level domain names (gTLDs), which could include such addresses as .google, .coke, or even .BBC.

There are currently 22 gTLDs, as well as about 250 country-level domain names such as .uk or .de.

It will cost $185,000 (�114,000) to apply for the suffixes, and companies would need to show they have a legitimate claim to the name they are buying.

Analysts say it is a price that global giants might be willing to pay - in order to maximise their internet presence.

The vote completes a six-year negotiation process and is the biggest change to the system since .com was first introduced 26 years ago.

Icann said it was beginning a global communications programme to raise awareness of the new domain names.

Applications will start on 12 January.



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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Sega hack hits 1.29 million users

Sega has confirmed that the personal data of 1.29 million of its customers was stolen in an attack on its systems.

It comes after the computer games firm said on Friday that e-mail addresses and dates of birth stored on the Sega Pass database were accessed by hackers.

However, Sega continues to say that payment information, such as credit card numbers, remained safe.

Sega spokeswoman Yoko Nagasawa said: "We are deeply sorry for causing trouble to our customers."

She added: "We want to work on strengthening security."

Ms Nagasawa added that it was not yet known when the Sega Pass online network could be restarted.

'Investigation'

In an e-mail sent to Sega Pass users on Friday, the company wrote: "Over the last 24 hours we have identified that unauthorised entry was gained to our Sega Pass database.

"We immediately took the appropriate action to protect our consumers' data and isolate the location of the breach. We have launched an investigation into the extent of the breach of our public systems."

Sega explained that it had reset all passwords and urged customers to change their log-on details on other services and websites where they used the same credentials.

It added that password details had not been stored in plain text, suggesting that they may have been secured by some kind of encryption.

Sega is the latest in a line of games companies to suffer hacking and denial of service attacks on their online services.

Nintendo, Sony and several multi-player gaming communities have been hit in recent months.

The hacker group Lulz Security, which has been involved in a number of high profile attacks, including one against Sega rival Nintento, has denied involvement in the Sega case.

Instead it showed some sympathy for the company on its Twitter feed.

"We want to help you destroy the hackers that attacked you. We love the Dreamcast, these people are going down," it said.



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Friday, June 17, 2011

US builds net for cyber war games

The United States government is building its own "scale model" of the internet to carry out cyber war games.

Several organisations, including the defence company Lockheed Martin, are working on prototypes of the "virtual firing range".

The system will allow researchers to simulate attacks by foreign powers and from hackers based inside the US.

More than $500m (�309m) has been allocated by the Department of Defense to develop "cyber technologies".

The National Cyber Range project is being overseen by the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (Darpa), which was also involved in early network research that led to the internet.

When ready, it will function as a test-bed for defensive and possibly offensive technologies such as network protection systems.

Having a controllable mini-internet would allow researchers to carry-out experiments "in days rather than the weeks it currently takes," Darpa spokesman Eric Mazzacone told the Reuters news agency.

Unlike the real internet, the in-house version could be wiped or reset between tests, explained Mr Mazzacone.

Development of the National Cyber Range is currently in the hands of several organisations, including Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Lockheed Martin.

One of their prototypes will be selected to go into operation later in the year.

Act of war

The United States has been gradually increasing funding for internet security-related projects.

In 2008, the US military was the subject of a serious cyber attack when part of its network became infected by a worm known as agent.btz.

President Obama, in May 2009, declared the cyber threat to be one of the "most serious" challenges facing the country.

Since then, his government claims to have been the subject of several attempted attacks, originating from overseas.

Lockheed Martin, one of the contractors involved in the National Cyber Range project was itself the subject of a security breach in May 2011.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon said it planned to publish proposals to categorise cyber attacks as acts of war.



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Teen hacker stole Lady Gaga songs

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An 18-year-old computer hacker who stole songs from artists including Lady Gaga has been sentenced to 18 months detention in Germany.

The court heard how the teenager, who called himself DJ Stolen, earned more than 15,000 euros (�13,260) by breaking copyright laws and hacking personal information from a number of singers.

The hacker used phishing emails and Trojan horse software to steal unpublished songs and then offer them for sale on the internet.

Anti-piracy teams in the UK and Germany noticed a growing number of pre-release tracks being leaked much earlier than normal.

Tracks were stolen from Lady Gaga, Justin Timberlake, Leona Lewis, Kesha and Mariah Carey in 2009 and 2010.

Kesha Singer Kesha had private photos stolen from her computer

The teenager, referred to in court as 'Deniz A' because of his age, was also found guilty of downloading explicit private photos from Kesha's computer.

Apology to Gaga

The court in the German city of Duisburg also heard how a letter of apology was published in Daily Bild, a German tabloid newspaper, from the teenager saying:

"Dear Lady Gaga, I am ashamed of what I have done. I did not think about the consequences."

The judge ruled that the teen was "driven more by a desire for recognition than by criminal intent".

The 18-year-old was also ordered to have therapy for an addiction to the internet.

Another hacker, 23, whose name wasn't released, was also given an 18 months suspended sentence.

Jeremy Banks, from the International Federation of the Phonograhic Industry (IFPI), which helped with the investigation said the sentences acted as a "deterrent" to others.

He said the crimes caused "huge damage to artists and record companies".



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Virgin tackles infected customers

About 1500 customers of internet service provider Virgin Media have been warned that their PCs are infected with a malicious virus.

The targeted customers had fallen victim to the SpyEye trojan that steals logins for online bank accounts.

Letters have been sent to those affected, giving them advice on how to clean up their computers.

Virgin is understood to be the first UK ISP to give specific warnings to customers about viruses on their PCs.

The other major service providers tackle malware at the individual computer level, offering free anti-virus software and advice.

Virgin said it had received information about the SpyEye infections from the Serious and Organised Crime Agency.

Early warning

The company stressed that it had not been monitoring user activity, rather some of their customers' IP addresses were found by law enforcement while investigating criminal botnets.

"It's a small number compared to the four million customers we have," said a spokesman, "but regardless of that, because of the seriousness it's still important to communicate with our customers."

The letters stress the seriousness of the situation and urge customers to update their security software and scan their machine to find and remove the malicious program. Alternatively, customers can sign up for a help service that allows a Virgin to remotely find and fix problems.

The spokesman added that the Virgin campaign started in August 2010 and since then it had sent letters to "several thousand" customers about a serious infection on their home computer.

"The category we are looking at are the ones that put our customers at most risk or the ones that will steal from them," he said.

SpyEye first appeared in early 2010 and has steadily gathered victims ever since. Some machines are infected via booby-trapped webpages or by tricking people into clicking on links that lead to the trojan being installed.

The SpyEye trojan and its many variants are being produced with a software kit that allows novices to put together their own versions of the malware. The kit, which costs $500 (�310), also comes with a tool to help control all the PCs that are infected.



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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Duke Nukem PR firm publicly axed

US games publisher Take 2 has parted company with public relations firm The Redner Group, following Twitter comments concerning Duke Nukem Forever.

Redner's contract was terminated after it said journalists who gave the game a poor review would be blacklisted.

Take 2's subsidiary, 2K Games, said it did not share "or endorse" the views.

Duke Nukem Forever, which has been in development since 1998, was criticised for its embarrassing character, dated design and poor controls.

The row erupted when Redner Group's founder, Jim Redner, published an angry tweet as the negative reviews of Duke Nukem Forever started to come in.

"Too many went too far with their reviews...we r reviewing who gets games next time and who doesn't based on today's venom," he tweeted.

The threat was quickly picked up by blog and gaming sites across the world, accusing Take 2 of strong arm tactics.

A day later, 2K Games sacked Redner Group and tweeted that it maintained "a mutually respectful relationship with the press and will continue to do so. We don't condone @TheRednerGroup's actions at all".

The most recent message on Redner's Twitter feed reads: "Again, I want everyone to know that I was acting on my own. 2K had nothing to do with this. I am so very sorry for what I said."

Classic reworked

First announced in 1998, Duke Nukem Forever was cancelled in 2009 when its developer - 3D Realms - collapsed.

"Start Quote

Too many went too far with their reviews...we r reviewing who gets games next time and who doesn't based on today's venom "

End Quote Tweet Jim Redner

It was subsequently resurrected by US developer Gearbox Software which released the game on PC, PS3 and XBox 360.

It now holds the record for the longest time between game releases. That was formerly held by StarCraft, which had a 12-year hiatus.

The series had legions of fans who waited in expectation of the next release.

However, while expectations were high, the final product disappointed most reviewers.

US game website 1Up said the game was one "not even the most maladjusted 13-year-old could love", IGN described it as a "muddled, hypocritical exercise in irritation" although compensated for by "solid shooting mechanics", and Gamespot UK said "it turns a famous gaming icon into an embarrassment".

Rik Henderson, a former co-presenter of Gamesmaster and writer with Pocket Lint, said that he was surprised at such a public statement by Jim Redner, but not the sentiment expressed.

"This sort of thing happens behind the scene regularly from a number of different companies; I've encountered this on many an occasion, naming no names," he told BBC News.

"Considering the number of games that come out every year, not everything is an A list title.

Mr Henderson said it was common practice for firms not to send out review code until a game was in the shops and journalists who broke such gentleman's agreements would find themselves down the list when it came to receiving future games.

However, he added that a game like Duke Nukem Forever had been so hyped up that this course of action was not a realistic option.

"That said, I'm still waiting for my review code," he quipped.

Take 2 refused to make any further comment on the ongoing row when contacted by the BBC.



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Hackers attack Malaysian websites

Hackers have attacked dozens of government websites in Malaysia, days after a hacking group criticised the country over censorship.

Malaysian officials said attempts had been made to hack 51 websites, and at least 41 had been disrupted.

The "Anonymous" group of hackers had threatened Malaysia with an attack this week, accusing the government of blocking some websites.

No group has yet said they carried out the attack.

But Anonymous said in an earlier web post that Malaysia's censoring of films and television shows and its blocking of file-sharing websites amounted to a denial of human rights.

The exact nature of the attacks was not immediately clear, and it may be that they were denial of service overloads, rather than hacking intrusions into the computer servers.

The main Malaysian government portal was among the websites that was targeted, and it was still inaccessible on Thursday.

The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission said attacks on websites with the .gov.my domain began late on Wednesday.

"We do not expect the overall recovery to these websites to take long as most websites have already recovered from the attack," the commission said in a statement.



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HP sues Oracle over chip dispute

Hewlett Packard (HP) is suing Oracle over a chip dispute in the latest clash between the two former allies.

The lawsuit accuses Oracle of behaving illegally in deciding that future versions of its database software will not support one line of HP servers.

The servers use an Itanium chip that Oracle insists is being phased out.

HP claim that Oracle's decision to stop the support will hurt its clients - Oracle has denied the claims, calling the lawsuit "malicious and meritless".

Relations between the two companies have deteriorated in the past year.

HP's former boss, Mark Hurd, joined Oracle almost a year ago.

HP had then threatened court action, claiming that Oracle would "exploit the knowledge of HP's strengths and weaknesses" as a result of hiring Mr Hurd.

'Strong-arm tactics'

"Start Quote

The silence from Oracle is deafening. We are very disappointed it has come to this"

End Quote Bill Wohl Hewlett Packard

The current dispute is the result of a combination of factors.

It centres around the future of the Itanium chip manufactured by Intel and the growing rivalry between the two companies in the field of server hardware market.

In March, Oracle announced that its database software would no longer support HP servers that use the chip.

It said it had evidence that Intel was planning to phase out the product, hence it did not plan to provide software that supports the processor - something Intel has denied.

But Oracle said in a statement that: "Intel's plans to end-of-life Itanium will be revealed in court".

HP says Oracle's real concern is to try to force customers to buy the Sun Microsystems servers manufactured by it.

The company claimed Oracle was using "strong-arm tactics to coerce customers into replacing their HP servers with Sun servers they do not want".

HP said it had sent a legal notice to Oracle last week, but a lack of response from Oracle had left it with no choice but to take legal action against its former ally.

"The silence from Oracle is deafening. We are very disappointed it has come to this," said Bill Wohl of HP.



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