Archive for July, 2010

Cincom eloquence receives IBM industry framework validation

July 31st, 2010

Software and services provider Cincom Systems, an IBM Premier Business Partner, announces that Cincom Eloquence™, its document automation solution  has been recognized with IBM’s Industry Framework for Government validation.

The IBM Industry Frameworks for Government are designed to provide a platform for implementing government solutions and projects. It is a strategic software platform for implementing smarter government solutions focused on improving citizen services, increasing transparency, enhancing civilian safety and security, and helping achieve a green and sustainable environment.

“We are very excited to receive validation of Cincom Eloquence on the Industry Frameworks for Government,” said Lori Gelter, program director, Cincom Document Solutions group. “The State of Utah’s Office of Recovery Services recently chose our software to streamline their document communications process, and we hope to be able to provide our software and services to other state agencies. Being a part of the IBM Industry Framework is a big step in the right direction to be able to do so.”

Cincom Eloquence provides automation tools to design sophisticated document models that can be dynamically applied to all types of communications. Engineered to deploy via service-oriented architecture (SOA), it produces structured document communications in high-volume batch with the flexibility to generate highly personalized documents on demand while interacting with customers in real time, delivered in any form preferred — print, fax, e-mail or web.

Cincom is an IBM Premiere Business Partner. The two companies have a strong partnership, which began in the late 1960s when Cincom CEO Tom Nies was an IBM Account Executive. Today, Cincom and IBM have over 800 joint customers.

Source:http://pr-canada.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=236592&Itemid=59

‘Unhackable’ android can be hacked

July 31st, 2010

Once thought to be unhackable, the Android phone is anything but, according to researchers presenting at Black Hat 2010.

FBI details worst social networking cyber crime problems

Not only has malicious software cloaked in a wallpaper application stolen personal information from infected phones and sent it to a Web site in China, but researchers from Lookout Mobile Security have found a way to take the phones over completely – including top-of-the-line models hawked by major wireless carriers.

In one presentation, Lookout’s CEO John Herring said the Jackeey Wallpaper app, which has been downloaded millions of times, can gather passwords, browser history, the subscriber ID and SIM card numbers and text messages.

In a separate presentation, researchers said top-of-the-line Android phones used by Sprint and Verizon can be taken over completely by attacking known flaws in the Linux operating system that underpins Android, researchers reported at Black Hat 2010. “It gives you root control, and you can do anything you want to do” with the phone, says Anthony Lineberry, a researcher for Lookout Mobile Security.

The company says Android’s reputation for security may be exaggerated. “It survived the recent pwn2own slay fest unscathed, but this does not mean it is safe by any means,” the company said in describing Lineberry’s talk.

The best way to distribute malware that could exploit the flaw – known as CVE-2009 1185 – is via Android applications that customers might acquire free or buy from the Android Market. Installing the booby-trapped application would give root control of the device, Lineberry says. “Root is kind of God mode in the context of Linux. Once you have that, you have pretty much any system privilege.”

CVE-2009 1185 has been known for more than a year and can be patched, but so far the carriers have not issued patches, Lineberry says. The root-control exploit has been successfully carried out in Lookout labs on EVO 4G (Sprint), Droid X (Verizon), and Droid Incredible (Verizon) as well as older models G1 and Hero, he says.

But root control is unnecessary in order to carry out the type of attack executed by Jackeey Wallpaper, according to another Lookout researcher, Tim Wyatt. Applications require permissions in order to access features of the phone, and these permissions can be exploited. So, for instance, an application that tells the customer the nearest Chinese restaurant would need access to the phones GPS capabilities.

When selling applications, developers must list all the permissions the application requires to work, and the customer must sign off on allowing those permissions. An application that sorts SMS messages but requires Internet access may seem suspicious, and customers might bail out of buying the application.

But some permissions sound innocuous, Wyatt says. Customers might not know what the permission “Import Android log” means, but approve an application that requires it because the name of the permission doesn’t sound threatening. But the logs can reveal browsing histories, passwords, phone numbers and a wealth of other data, he says.

Malicious applications with Internet permissions can be crafted to send the data in the background or display innocuous Web sites to mask where the data is being sent, Wyatt says.

The best course for users is to beware the applications they buy and if they are suspicious, not to download the apps, Lineberry says.

Lookout has carried out a study it calls the App Genome project that examined Android and iPhone applications for what permissions they have and what malicious activity they might carry out with the set of permissions they have. An application might use the permissions legitimately, but in the hands of a hacker could cause mischief, the company says.

Part of the permission system in Android allows applications to tap each other’s resources, so an application without permission to access the Internet might have access to an application that does and so use the Internet anyway, the researchers say.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/202240/unhackable_android_can_be_hacked.html?tk=hp_new

Hackers dupe world’s biggest companies

July 31st, 2010

HACKERS at an infamous DefCon gathering are proving that old-fashioned smooth talk rivals slick software skills when it comes to pulling off attacks on computer networks.

A first-ever “social engineering” contest challenges hackers to call workers at 10 companies including technology titans Google, Apple, Cisco, and Microsoft and get them to reveal too much information to strangers.

“Out of all the companies called, not one company shut us down,” said Offensive Security operations manager Christopher Hadnagy, part of the social-engineer.org team behind the competition.

The team kept hackers within the boundaries of the law, but had them coax out enough information to show that workers would have unintentionally made it easier to attack networks.

Workers that unknowingly ended up on calls with hackers ranged from a chief technical officer to IT support personnel and sales people.

One employee was conned into opening programs on a company computer to read off specifications regarding types of software being used, details that would let a hacker tailor viruses to launch at the system.

“You often have to crack through firewalls and burn the perimeter in order to get into the internal organisation,” Mati Aharoni of Offensive Security, a company that tests company computer defences, said.

“It is much easier to use social engineering techniques to get to the same place.”

Other companies targeted were Pepsi, Coca Cola, Shell, BP, Ford, and Proctor & Gamble.

The contest, still taking place at DefCon and promises the winner an Apple iPad tablet computer, is intended to show that hardened computer networks remain vulnerable if people using them are soft touches.

“We didn’t want anyone fired or feeling bad at the end of the day,” Aharoni said.

“We wanted to show that social engineering is a legitimate attack vector.”

A saying that long ago made it onto T-shirts at the annual DefCon event is “There is no patch for human stupidity.”

“Companies don’t think their people will fall for something as simple as someone calling and just asking a few questions,” Hadnagy said.

“It doesn’t require a very technical level of attacker,” Aharoni added. “It requires someone with an ability to schmooze well.”

One worker nearly foiled a hacker by insisting he send his questions in an email that would be reviewed and answered if appropriate.

The hacker convinced the worker to change his mind by claiming to be under pressure to finish a report for a boss by that evening.

“As humans, we naturally want to help other people,” Hadgagy said. “I’m not advocating not helping people. Just think about what you say before you say it.”

Information about “exploiting human vulnerabilities” was available at the social-engineer.org website.

Source:http://foreign.peacefmonline.com/news/201007/65396.php

Microsoft shows off new cloud-computing customers

July 31st, 2010

Microsoft has announced that it will offer its hosted e-mail and portal software to three major corporate customers, tech news site CNet reports.

The company said that it would providing its hosted services to Dow Chemical, Hyatt Hotels, and the University of Georgia.

The announcement comes just before the company is set to host a financial analyst conference.

Despite being a late entry into the market, Microsoft has succeeded in carving itself a large portion of the market share.

The company said that the three new deals allowed it to expand its cloud customer base, which includes 16 of the top 20 pharmaceutical companies, 15 of the top 20 global banks and 13 of the top 20 telecom services providers.

In a statement to ChannelWeb, Microsoft’s Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner said: “The Microsoft cloud services ecosystem creates new opportunities for our customers. It opens up new markets for businesses, improves operational efficiency and productivity, and transforms what IT can deliver to advance business goals.”

Source:http://www.itproportal.com/portal/news/article/2010/7/31/microsoft-shows-new-cloud-computing-customers/

Google’s 2010 shopping spree has cost $1.1 Billion so far

July 31st, 2010

Google Inc. has spent $1.1 billion during the first half of the year buying up 22 companies, with more than half of the amount going toward its recently completed acquisition of mobile ad service AdMob.

The financial breakdown was part of a second-quarter report the Internet search leader filed Friday.

Google’s shopping spree has been focused on startups so small that it hasn’t been required to specify the price it paid in each deal. That didn’t change in Friday’s filing. Google listed 20 of its acquisitions under one lump sum totaling $293 million, or an average of $14.7 million per deal.

The company, based in Mountain View, Calif., also revealed that its AdMob purchase cost less than the previously announced price of $750 million. Friday’s filing listed the closing price at $681 million, consisting of Google stock and $26 million in cash.

Google’s next biggest deal during the period was the $123 million acquisition of video service On2 Technologies Inc.

Earlier this month, Google announced plans to buy travel technology company ITA Software Inc. for $700 million. That deal is expected to take several months to close while Google awaits regulatory approval.

Shares fell 14 cents to close earlier at $484.85.

Source:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/31/googles-2010-shopping-spr_n_666144.html

Motorola Droid X announcement awaited but droid gets froyo next week

July 31st, 2010

It’s Froyo everywhere. After Sprint announced that HTC EVO 4G would start receiving the Froyo upgrade next week, Verizon went ahead and made known that it will follow suit. The Android 2.2 Froyo upgrade will be sent to the original Motorola Droid in the week beginning August 2.

There is no official announcement about when Verizon Motorola Droid X gets the Froyo upgrade but some users have reported receiving OTA froyo updates already. Now with the Droid receiving Froyo announcement, a race has begun between the EVO and Droid to be the first Android phone to receive the Froyo upgrade, after Google’s Nexus One, which received the upgrade in late June.

As said above, it’s still unclear when the Verizon’s Droid X and Droid Incredible phones will be blessed with Froyo upgrade. At the launch event of Droid X, it was said that the device will receive the upgrade “late summer.” But according to the rumors, the two devices will get the Froyo simultaneously with the original Droid. However, there has been no such announcement to confirm the rumors.

Moreover, according to the norms, the software is sent to a subset of users each day. Hence, not all Droid users will receive the upgrade simultaneously. Some might have to wait for four or five days more than the official release date of the software.

If you are thinking how Android 2.2 or Froyo would help boost your phone experience and makes your device user-friendly, here’s why. Android 2.2 will enable you to use Adobe Flash while web browsing. In return, Flash will allow you to play numerous free games online, play video directly in the browser and access full websites.

Froyo will add more capabilities to your Motorola device and the Droid Incredible. Once you get the updates, your browser will perform exceptionally well, particularly those sites with heavy javascript, experts claim.

Source:http://www.usanewsweek.com/news/Motorola-Droid-X-Announcement-Awaited-But-Droid-Gets-Froyo-Next-Week-1280584957/

Full iphone 4 jailbreak and how to unlock iphone 4/3G/3Gs 4.0/3.1.3 tutorial

July 31st, 2010

Search no more if you want to unlock iphone 4 4.0 & iphone 3G/3Gs 4.0/3.1.3 in a simple way.We know that our software can jailbreak iphone 4/3G/3Gs 4.0/3.1.3.Iphone 4 jailbreak solution provided by our team,use it to jailbreak iphone 3G/3Gs 4.0/3.1.3.Although only a day has passed since the official release of IOS in April, and we knew it would be possible to jailbreak you iPhone and iPod touch terminals. iPhone Dev Team has released the beta Ultiva redsn0w, 0.95b5-3, which makes it possible to jailbreak the iPhone 3G terminals and iPod touch 2G. There is no compatible with iPhone 3G easily. They have also commented that the application is also available from Cydia ultrasn0w release.

Let’s step by step how to do it.

As we read from the hand of iPhone Dev Team is already possible to jailbreak the newly released IOS Terminal 4 for iPhone and iPod touch. Make jailbreak is only possible at the moment for iPhone 3G terminals e iPod touch 2G, so if you have a different model must wait a few days.

The steps are simple and you could say the same as in the past:

-1. Make a backup in iTunes 9.2 content from your iPhone / iPod touch.

-2. Download IOS 4 for Iphone 3G or iPod touch 2G.

-3. 4 IOS System Restore by holding down the shift key when clicking the Restore button, and choose the file you downloaded in previous step.

-4. Open Redsn0w 0.9.5b5-3, downloads:

-5. Open the firmware downloaded and follow the steps redsnow indicating.

-6. Restart and go.

-7. Liberation iPhone 3G. We have only to add the repo in Cydia: repo666.ultrasn0w.com and install Ultrasn0w 0.93.

Once the above IOS already have four and we’ll let our guide and new IOS tips 4 of the new Apple operating system.

Source:http://www.techtring.com/2010/07/31/full-iphone-4-jailbreak-and-how-to-unlock-iphone-43g3gs-4-03-1-3-tutorial/

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