Issue no. 7, 2001 Published: Sep 28, 2001 |
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Microsoft defends IIS despite Gartner recommendation |
Sun leads challenge to Microsoft's Web ID system |
New dot-info domains added to Internet |
German investors win landmark Infomatec ruling |
Hacking could become an act of terrorism |
India's IT and telecoms ministries to merge |
Study: Mobile phones to overtake fixed lines by 2006 |
'Mobile phones speed up brain' |
Japanese make super-storage disk |
Proof Linux can replace Windows 2000? |
Researchers develop 'Robo-roach' |
Coming soon: the sensitive, caring computer |
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| Microsoft defends IIS despite Gartner recommendation |
Microsoft says its Internet Information Server (IIS) is as secure as
comparable products from other vendors. This follows a Gartner
recommendation that enterprises hit by both the ''Nimda'' and ''Code
Red'' worms look at alternatives, such as iPlanet and Apache.
According to the advisory from Gartner the success of the worms
''highlights the risk of using IIS and the effort involved in keeping up
with Microsoft's frequent security patches''.
Gartner's advisory was issued in the aftermath of last week's attack by
the mass-mailing Nimda worm which spread via network-based e-mail, as
well as through contaminated Web browsers and exploited back doors left
behind by previous malicious codes as Code Red and Sadmind.
''The Gartner recommendation overlooks the fact that security is an
industry-wide challenge and that serious vulnerabilities have been found
in all Web server products and platforms,'' a Microsoft spokesman said.
The emphasis should be on ensuring safe security practices and making
sure that all recommended patches are installed, he added. |
| CNN / IDG
Sep 28, 2001 |
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| Sun leads challenge to Microsoft's Web ID system |
Sun Microsystems on Wednesday unveiled a sweeping alliance of companies
that have banded together to establish common standards for Internet
identity that will facilitate Web commerce and pose a challenge to
Microsoft's Passport initiative.
The group, code-named the Liberty Alliance, intends to develop an open
technology that is not controlled by a single company and can be used to
authenticate users through a single login. The system will work with any
device that plugs into the Internet, whether it be a PC, cellular phone,
television, car or credit card machine, the alliance said.
Last week, Microsoft announced it would make its 2-year-old Passport
authentication system open to other companies. The Sun-backed alliance
said Microsoft has been invited to participate, but has not yet
responded. |
| Nando Times / Financial Times / AP
Sep 28, 2001 |
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| New dot-info domains added to Internet |
More than 52,000 domain names ending with the suffix ''.info'' were
activated last weekend in the Internet's first major address expansion
since the 1980s. Afilias, the company running ''.info'', expected to
enter another 250,000 names into the master directories this week.
The first batch of 52,245 names were claimed by trademark holders. The
second round of names will be selected from about 700,000 applications
submitted before Friday's deadline. When there are duplicates, Afilias
will choose one at random, leaving about 250,000 unique names. |
| Nando Times / AP
Sep 25, 2001 |
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| German investors win landmark Infomatec ruling |
A German court set a potentially far-reaching precedent on Monday when
it ordered two managers of a Neuer Markt company to cover DM100,000
(E51,129) in losses incurred by one of their shareholders.
The decision against Gerhard Harlos and Alexander Haüfele, two former
board members of software maker Infomatec, marks the first time damages
are granted to a shareholder because of a misleading statement by a
German company. The law firm representing the shareholder said the
decision might persuade the defendants and other companies in similar
cases to settle out of court.
The claimant in the Infomatec case had bought shares in May 1999 after
the company issued a so-called ''ad-hoc'' announcement - the system used
by listed companies to disseminate market sensitive information -
claiming it had secured a DM55m order that later proved to be worth
DM9m. |
| Financial Times
Sep 25, 2001 |
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| Hacking could become an act of terrorism |
Hackers and privacy advocates everywhere were stunned to hear that the
US may be pressing for legislation which would make computer crime a
terrorist act. The result would be that convicted hackers could face
life imprisonment with no chance of parole. Meeting on Capitol Hill this
week, the US Justice Department is apparently urging the Bush
administration to rush the Anti Terrorism Act through Congress.
The 25-page proposal gives the Government extended powers for conducting
electronic surveillance and accessing records, with an extra emphasis on
the ability to detain ''terrorists'' suspected of using such
technologies to further their plans.
The document proposes a list of ''Federal terrorism offences'' which
includes extracts from the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, effectively
making it a terrorist act to break into a computer for the purposes of
damage, sabotage, or obtaining information of value, or to release a
malicious program that intentionally damages a system, like a virus. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 27, 2001 |
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| India's IT and telecoms ministries to merge |
India said on Thursday that it would merge its information technology
and telecommunication ministries in a move to increase government
efficiency and streamline the development of the IT industry.
Reforming the telecoms sector has long been an important priority of the
government. While other reform measures, particularly privatisation,
have been stalled, liberalisation of telecoms continues to move forward.
Telecoms are crucial for the development of India's IT industry, which
is expected to earn the country $11.2bn this year from exports and
attracts badly needed foreign investment as well as international
prestige
Despite a recent slowdown the National Association of Software and
Service Companies, the IT industry umbrella organisation, predicts that
the IT sector will generate $50bn in revenues by 2008. |
| Financial Times
Sep 28, 2001 |
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| Study: Mobile phones to overtake fixed lines by 2006 |
The number of cell phones worldwide could eclipse the number of
traditional land lines by 2006, according to a report issued by
California research company The Carmel Group.
With Asia and Europe leading the way as heavy adopters of wireless
technology, by 2006 there will be 1.6bn cellular phone subscribers and
just 963m fixed-line subscribers, according to the report.
This shift toward a highly mobile world could increase the productivity
of workers around the globe, as users will have almost immediate access
to many forms of information no matter where they go. But users will
need to learn new ways to use the quick feed of information for the
technology to be effective, The Carmel Group warned. |
| CNN / IDG
Sep 26, 2001 |
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| 'Mobile phones speed up brain' |
Mobile phones may cause damage to health by speeding up the brain's
response times, according to Dr. Alan Preece, head of Biophysics at
Britain's Bristol Oncology Centre.
As consumer concerns mount that prolonged mobile phone use could lead to
tumours, a recent study showing an alarming rate of brain cancer in some
cellphone users is helping swing scientific opinion in Britain.
Dr. Alan Preece is among a group of scientists becoming increasingly
convinced that radiation from cellphones triggers chemical processes in
the body that may be harmful. Six separate studies now indicate that
response times speed up because of stress proteins when people are
exposed to radio frequency signals from mobiles phones.
Other research from Sweden and Switzerland has indicated that radiation
from mobile phone calls disturbs sleep. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Sep 24, 2001 |
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| Japanese make super-storage disk |
Sharp, TDK and the Japanese National Institute of Advanced Industrial
Science and Technology (AIST) are on track to make available a
12-centimeter optical disk which holds 125Gb of data, or 25 times more
than a 4.7Gb DVD disk. They claim to have developed a technology which
uses a red laser beam, similar to those used for making optical disks.
The researchers believe if they are able to make the dot size smaller,
they can put more dots on the disc and it will hold more data. The size
of laser spot has been narrowed by using heat generated by the laser
beam without changing the laser's wavelength. Until now, engineers
needed to use shorter-wavelength lasers to get smaller dots.
The Japanese team said they have succeeded in registering a dot size as
small as 85 nanometers, using a common red laser beam. And the same type
of laser would create a 400-nanometer dot, according to AIST. The
researchers expect commercialisation to be possible in about four years. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 25, 2001 |
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| Proof Linux can replace Windows 2000? |
In light of the ongoing debate over the increased security of Linux, and
the readiness of the open source OS for the desktop, Thai IT consultant
Rob Valliere has set out to answer the question: ''Can Linux be used as
a replacement for Windows 2000?.''
After an intensive hands-on Linux project lasting several months, he
claims that Linux Red Hat 7.1 can serve as an alternative to Windows
2000. Effectively rolling out Linux across a network containing one
server and 24 clients can potentially save as much as $10,000.
Linux offers desktop applications for corporate usage in much the same
vein as Windows. The graphical OS can run on ageing Pentium computers
with 64Mb or more of RAM. As an alternative to Microsoft's Access
database application, a fusion of Apache Web server, MySQL database and
PHP scripting facility was used.
The full report, along with details of the pitfalls encountered, can be
found at http://www.robval.com/linux/desktop/index.asp. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 24, 2001 |
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| Researchers develop 'Robo-roach' |
Japanese researchers at Tokyo University are developing a remote
controlled cockroach that could be used to carry a miniature camera and
microphone. The 'Robo-roach' could be used in any number of environments
ranging from searching through rubble for disaster victims to acting as
a tiny spy in espionage missions.
Working under a $5m grant from the Japanese government, scientists have
managed to implant tiny microchip backpacks onto the insects allowing
them to be controlled with a remote handset. The pulse-emitting backpack
sends signals to the host cockroach through electrodes, causing it to
turn left, right, run forward or back.
Only the American cockroach, Perplaneta Americana, can be used in the
research because it is the biggest and hardiest of the species, capable
of carrying 20 times its own weight. The microchips are implanted
surgically after the cockroaches have been anaesthetised with carbon
dioxide, and their wings and antennae are removed. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 26, 2001 |
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| Coming soon: the sensitive, caring computer |
Experts at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab are writing
programmes that can reduce ''computer rage'' by responding with soothing
words to the user's shouts of anger, facial expressions or skin changes
caused by emotions.
It is thought that, eventually, computers will be built with their own
independent ''emotions'' and use them to improve their performance,
assessing the emotional or psychological impact on humans of their
mistakes.
Computer games will be able to react to the player's emotions and
express their own fear or anger. The technologies could improve safety
by allowing computers to detect whether a train driver or airline pilot
had fallen ill or stopped concentrating. It can also help in warfare.
The latest development in computerised battle simulation used by the US
military is to program emotions into their virtual soldiers. |
| The Independent
Sep 24, 2001 |
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