Mar 21 2009

Report Links Russian Intelligence Agencies To Cyber Attacks

narramissic writes “A report released Friday by a group of cyber-security experts from greylogic finds it is very likely that the Foreign Military Intelligence agency (the GRU) and Federal Security Service (the FSB) directed cyber attacks on Georgian government servers in July and August of 2008. ‘Following a complex web of connections, the report claims that an Internet service provider connected with the Stopgeorgia.ru web site, which coordinated the Georgian attacks, is located next door to a Russian Ministry of Defense Research Institute called the Center for Research of Military Strength of Foreign Countries, and a few doors down from GRU headquarters.’ But Paul Ferguson, a researcher with Trend Micro who has reviewed the report, says it’s a ‘bit of a stretch’ to conclude that the Georgia attacks were state-sponsored. ‘You can connect dots to infer things, but inferring things does not make them so,’ he said. One other interesting allegation in the report is that a member of the Whackerz Pakistan hacking group, which claimed responsibility for defacing the Indian Eastern Railway Web site on Dec. 24, 2008, is employed by a North American wireless communications company and presents an ‘insider threat’ for his employer.”

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Mar 19 2009

Nintendo To Take On Apple With DSi App Store

Dave Allen writes “Despite Nintendo publicly claiming no direct competition with the iPhone or iPod Touch with its new DSi console, reports have been leaked about the Big N actively encouraging developers to begin work on small form gaming and non-gaming applications for the DSi’s download service. This is the first step toward Nintendo putting together a direct App Store rival, and could be the marketing hook it’s been desperately searching for to convince gamers to upgrade their DS.” It seems only fair that since the iPhone is now a gaming platform, the DS is becoming a PDA. And, if the only difference between them is a 3G wireless connection, the rivalry can only get more fierce.

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Mar 16 2009

Europe Is Testing 12.5 Gbps Wireless

Lorien_the_first_one brings word that in Europe, a breakthrough for post-4G communications has been announced. A public-private consortium known as IPHOBAC has been developing new communications technology that is near commercialization now. Quoting: “With much of the mobile world yet to migrate to 3G mobile communications, let alone 4G, European researchers are already working on a new technology able to deliver data wirelessly up to 12.5Gb/s. The technology — known as ‘millimeter-wave’ or microwave photonics — has commercial applications not just in telecommunications (access and in-house networks) but also in instrumentation, radar, security, radio astronomy and other fields.”

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Mar 15 2009

Your cell phone is dirtier than a toilet. Here’s help!

Cell phones harbor thriving colonies of bacteria and viruses. Researchers say, for example, that cell phones are major carriers of superbugs in hospitals. Now, a new gadget helps you sterilize your phone! (You should also try to use a wireless Bluetooth headset.)

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Mar 13 2009

Apple exploring Magic Wand controller for next-gen Apple TV

Apple is exploring the possibility of including a wireless “remote wand” with future versions of its Apple TV media system that would provide users with precise control over a cursor on the Apple TV screen in very much the same way a conventual mouse controls a cursor on a PC. It would also unlock three-dimensional controls similar to those offered

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Mar 12 2009

Researchers Sniff Keystrokes From Thin Air, Wires

narramissic writes “Two separate research teams have found that the electromagnetic radiation that is generated when a computer keyboard is tapped is actually pretty easy to capture and decode. Using an oscilloscope and an inexpensive wireless antenna, the Ecole Polytechnique team was able to pick up keystrokes from virtually any keyboard, including laptops — with 95 percent accuracy over a distance of up to 20 meters. Using similar techniques, Inverse Path researchers Andrea Barisani and Daniele Bianco picked out keyboard signals from keyboard ground cables. On PS/2 keyboards, ‘the data cable is so close to the ground cable, the emanations from the data cable leak onto the ground cable, which acts as an antenna,’ Barisani said. That ground wire passes through the PC and into the building’s power wires, where the researchers can pick up the signals using a computer, an oscilloscope and about 0 worth of other equipment. Barisani and Bianco will present their findings at the CanSecWest hacking conference next week in Vancouver. The Ecole Polytechnique team has submitted their research for peer review and hopes to publish it very soon.”

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Mar 12 2009

Researchers Sniff Keystrokes From Thin Air, Wires

narramissic writes “Two separate research teams have found that the the electromagnetic radiation that is generated when a computer keyboard is tapped is actually pretty easy to capture and decode. Using an oscilloscope and an inexpensive wireless antenna, the the Ecole Polytechnique team was able to pick up keystrokes from virtually any keyboard, including laptops — with 95 percent accuracy over a distance of up to 20 meters. Using similar techniques, Inverse Path researchers Andrea Barisani and Daniele Bianco picked out keyboard signals from keyboard ground cables. On PS/2 keyboards, ‘the data cable is so close to the ground cable, the emanations from the data cable leak onto the ground cable, which acts as an antenna,’ Barisani said. That ground wire passes through the PC and into the building’s power wires, where the researchers can pick up the signals using a computer, an oscilloscope and about 0 worth of other equipment. Barisani and Bianco will present their findings at the CanSecWest hacking conference next week in Vancouver. The Ecole Polytechnique team has submitted their research for peer review and hopes to publish it very soon.”

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Mar 4 2009

iRobot Develops Hamster-Guided Robotic Vacuum

carusoj writes “The folks at iRobot apparently have plenty of time on their hands. They created a prototype wireless, robotic vacuum cleaner… powered by a hamster running inside a spinning ball. The rodent’s movements with the ball are fed to and analyzed by a complex set of sensors, which then guide the actual vacuum device to mimic the animal’s speed and direction. You can see where this is going: it’s a clever ploy to then get you to buy a second robot that would automatically feed, water, and clean up after the hamster in the first robot.”

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Mar 3 2009

Apple ready with new Time Capsules, AirPort Extremes

Apple is poised to introduce new versions of its Time Capsule wireless backup appliance and AirPort Extreme 802.11n wireless routers, regulatory filings with the Federal Communications Commission reveal.

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Mar 1 2009

Spectrum Fees May Preclude US Low-Cost Cellular

theodp writes “Not to apologize for an industry that charges ,000 to catch a Chicago Bears game, but will the huge spectrum fees charged by the government block the emergence of low-cost cellular service? In the most recent FCC spectrum auction, carriers paid nearly billion to grab a swath of the 700MHz spectrum. And now under President Obama’s proposed budget, wireless carriers would be hit with huge annual fees — eventually reaching 0 million per carrier per year — for the right to hold a spectrum license. Critics say the carriers will simply pass these fees through to consumers.”

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