Archive for August, 2008

Chicken souvlaki to die for and other pungent offerings to live for

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

The flavours sing like Nana

Mark Laba
Province

It’s all Greek to Rania Bonofas and Melind Hind, who serve up plates of chicken souvlaki, calamari and roast lamb with a bottle of Rapsani wine. Mmmm. –SAM LEUNG – THE PROVINCE

Review

Kerkis Taverna

Where: 3605 W. 4th Ave., Vancouver

Payment/reservations: Major credit cards, 604-731-2712

Drinks: Fully licensed

Hours: Tues.-Thurs., 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m.; Fri., 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m.; Sat., 4 p.m.-11 p.m.; Sun.-Mon., 4 p.m.-10 p.m.

The Greeks are known for many impressive and influential things that have been handed down over the ages and still hold sway over our lives today, such as democracy, philosophy, the Olympic games and chicken souvlaki. I would dare say that the latter is even on par with the invention of the wheel, although feta cheese is not to be underestimated either when it comes to the shaping of Western Civilization.

One thing you can say about Greek cuisine is that it remains as steadfast in its ways as Mt. Olympus, even on a smoggy Athens day. No fusion fussing or fancypants finagling with this food — it’s just the good old straight up Mediterranean diet with copious amounts of olive oil and garlic.

I’d heard that some of the best to be found in the city was at this place, so Peaches headed there immediately. The name puzzled me and I found that Kerkis is a mountain on the island of Samos and not, as I thought, the name for Capt. Kirk in ancient Greek. Live and learn.

This is the mountain where it’s said Pythagoras hid out in a cave after he shook up the world of triangle theorists and they came looking for him. I myself have a bone to pick with this Pythagoras guy, No. 1 being he liked math, whereas I still can’t figure out a 15-per-cent tip on my restaurant bill.

I put aside these feelings, though, as we stepped into the Parthenon-inspired pillared foyer of this warm, woodsy-toned establishment.

The interior is as welcoming as the menu, which features all your old Greek favourites but cooked with an Old World warmth and flair that really makes the flavours sing.

The chicken souvlaki ($16.99) and roast lamb ($17.99) are as tender as a Nana Mouskouri ballad and as juicy as a joke in an Aristophanes comedy, especially the one about the two Greeks, a Catholic priest and a rabbi in a chariot race.

Truly tasty (and this comes from a guy who’s not exactly enamoured of eating cephalopod parts) is the calamari skaras appetizer ($9.99), broiled squid that’s been marinated in olive oil, lemon and a tantalizing mix of herbs and spices. Equally delicious is the biftekia ($8.99), the char-broiled beef patties done up with onion and a hint of light gravy with a lemony undercurrent.

We also sampled the hummus ($5.99), which was excellent and had enough garlic to punch a hole in your esophagus. If you’re dining with a group of people and want to sample a bit of everything a good route to take is one of the three platter options. The Kerkis, the Samos or the Pythagoras Seafood Platter span the spectrum of Greek cuisine, from mousaka to lamb chops, dolmathes to scallops and prawns. And I’ve got to say the feta cheese here has that exquisite pungency I usually equate with washing your socks in the Aegean.

Which is not a bad thing for me, since I’m from the stinky cheese school of thinking, the smellier the better, which I believe is one of Socrates’ paradoxes.

While eating here, I had a brainstorm (Greek food often affects me that way) and on a napkin I worked out my very own Pythagorean Poultry Theorem that should take the mathematical world by storm. Now all I need to find is a square chicken.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

A splash of Mediterranean warmth on West 4th.

RATINGS: Food: B+ Service: A- Atmosphere: B+

© The Vancouver Province 2008

Seems to us this gas tank is a good Fit

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman
Province

The Honda Fit has passed all crash tests without registering any gas-tank problems.

Dear Tom and Ray: My wife wants to buy a Honda Fit, but now she is worried about the gas tank. It is located under the front seat rather than under the trunk. Is this dangerous?

RAY: If we tell you it’s dangerous, you’re not going to buy her the car, then take out a large life-insurance policy on her, are you, Prentiss?

TOM: It’s not dangerous, as far as we can tell, Prentiss. We don’t know definitively, because the Fit has only been out for a few years, and it’s possible that a problem could come to light later. But from what we can tell, it’s not an issue.

RAY: Most cars have their gas tank right behind the back seat — conveniently enough, where the mother-in-law usually rides. You’ll notice no one’s ever written to us to complain about that!

TOM: Honda moved the gas tank in the Fit under the driver’s seat to create more room in the back to fold the seats flat. And it IS a very nice, functional design, from the point of view of usable interior space.

RAY: When we looked underneath a Fit, we noticed that the tank doesn’t extend right to the outside edge of the vehicle. It’s at least somewhat protected behind a side structural member.

TOM: Here’s what we do know. When the Fit was crash-tested, it got top ratings for both frontal crashes and driver’s-side impacts. That’s a good sign right there. In addition, if the crash testing agencies (the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration or the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety) had seen anything that worried them during a crash test (like, for example, a gas tank that explodes and burns any surviving crash-test dummies beyond all recognition), they would have mentioned it in the optional “safety concerns” section of the results.

There are no such comments about the Fit.

RAY: These days, gas tanks are made of plastic, and they’re pretty hard to puncture. They’re actually very resilient, in our experience.

TOM: If something entered the driver’s side of the car with enough force to wipe out the gas tank, it probably would wipe out the entire front seat, too, if you catch my drift. So either way, your wife won’t have to worry about it.

RAY: I’m sure my brother’s making you feel a lot better, huh, Prentiss?

TOM: Actually, while we can’t say for certain, we have no evidence that suggests it’s a problem. If it gives you any additional confidence, the placement of the gas tank doesn’t stop us from recommending the Fit, which we think is an excellent little car.

New Google box for offices can search 10 million files

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Eric Auchard, Reuters
Sun

A Google search page is seen through the spectacles of a computer user in Leicester, central England, in this file photo from July 20, 2007. Web search leader Google said on Friday that it would participate in an upcoming wireless spectrum auction if the U.S. Federal Communications Commission added a key condition. REUTERS/Darren Staples

A Google sign is seen at its headquarters in Mountain View, California May 22, 2008. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc said on Tuesday it is an offering an upgraded version of the hardware appliance its sells to companies and government organizations for Google-style Web search of office documents.

The Web search leader said the latest version of the Google Search Appliance, a pizza-sized box that holds a self-contained search system for managing an organization’s electronic files, can store up to 10 million documents in a single box.

The new product has the same capacity as a previous version that came in a five-box rack. Google already sells a 12-box version of the appliance in a rack the size of a stand-up refrigerator that can search up to 30 million documents.

The appliances contain Google software to power the search services, running on storage hardware from Dell Inc .

Once installed in a network, the appliances help staff find documents in various different corporate store houses, from EMC Corp’s Documentum, IBM’s FileNet, Open Text’s LiveLink and Microsoft Corp’s SharePoint.

New features in the latest model include greater encryption powers and the ability for Google Alerts to notify users when new documents are stored on the network by colleagues.

Network administrators will be able to manage Google Search Appliances in 27 languages, adding Turkish, Czech, Vietnamese and Portuguese. The boxes can, in turn, deliver search results to office workers in 40 different languages.

Mountain View, California-based Google does not disclose revenue for search appliances, which are part of its enterprise software and services business aimed at corporate buyers.

Roughly 98 percent of its revenue comes from advertising sold alongside services on Google.com and affiliated sites.

But because Google does not reveal revenue for the business, it is hard to verify its claims to be the market share leader in enterprise, as well as consumer, search.

“We estimate, with obviously imperfect information, that we are the market leader,” Matt Glotzbach, product management director for Google Enterprise, said in a phone interview.

Rival providers of search used inside company networks include Microsoft, IBM, and Autonomy of Britain.

© Reuters 2008

 

Vancouver Area Real estate price drop signals cycle change

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Benchmark prices for all property types have dipped 2.1 per cent

Derrick Penner
Sun

House for sale in the Marpole area of Vancouver in April of this year. Vancouver Sun files

Month-over-month declines in real estate prices across many Lower Mainland property markets are another sign the overall market cycle has run its course, according to one housing economist.

The so-called benchmark price for all property types tracked in Metro Vancouver, excluding Surrey, have dipped 2.1 per cent since May to hit $556,605 at the end of July, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reported Tuesday.

In the Fraser Valley markets, which include Surrey, there were also month-to-month drops in prices in July with the biggest decline in average single-family-home price. The average Surrey house price of $520,232 was down six per cent from the month before.

Cameron Muir, chief economist for the B.C. Real Estate Association, said he doesn’t believe that there was a housing bubble that has now burst, but said there has been a change in the cycle.

“Typically at the end of a market cycle you will see home prices remain flat, or even come off a few percentage points a year, until the next cycle begins,” Muir said in an interview.

“That’s what we’re looking at right now,” he added, but “barring a complete deterioration in the provincial economy and mortgage interest rates climbing rapidly, that’s kind of what we see in terms of what market activity is showing us.”

The Vancouver board reported 2,174 property sales in July, a 44-per-cent decline from the same month in 2007. July listings, meanwhile, increased 24 per cent to 6,104 compared with the same month a year ago.

Total active listings in the inventory, however, were down slightly from June, the board said, at just over 19,000 compared with just over 20,000 the month before.

“We’re seeing more price reductions in properties listed on the market, which is a levelling impact on the housing-price increases experienced at the end of last year and into the first quarter of 2008,” Dave Watt, president of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, said in a news release.

The board said the dip in prices was felt across property types.

The typical detached home price has declined 2.3 per cent, the typical townhouse one per cent and the typical condominium one per cent since the end of May.

The dip, however, hasn’t taken out all of the gains that property owners have seen over the last year. Board statistics show that the typical detached home price, of $753,165 is still 5.4 per cent higher compared with the same month a year ago.

The typical townhouse price in July of $473,953 was 5.7-per-cent higher than July 2007. And the typical condominium price of $381,687 in July was still 4.7 per cent higher than in the same month a year ago. Sales across the Fraser Valley in July were down 35 per cent to 1,284 compared with the same month a year ago and new listings rose 20 per cent to 3,742 compared with July 2007, bringing the region to a record high inventory of 12,299 units.

“It’s a situation of supply and demand,” Kelvin Neufeld, president of the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, said in a news release. “Buyers are now in the driver’s seat in the Fraser Valley and we’re starting to see that reflected in home prices.”

The average price of a detached home across the Fraser Valley was $530,455 in July, which was down 5.6 per cent compared with June but still two per cent above the July 2007 average sale price.

In townhouses, the average Fraser Valley price in July of $324,042 was 3.9 per cent less than the June average, but 0.2- per-cent higher than in the same month a year ago.

In Fraser Valley condominium prices, the July average price of $234,597 was 1.1 per cent below June, but remains 6.5 per cent higher than in the same month a year ago.

Muir said several factors are crimping the demand side of housing markets. The prices have become less affordable for too many who want to get into the market, the economy has slowed in areas such as forestry and tourism, and consumer confidence is down in the face of high fuel prices, the spectre of rising food prices and bad news coming out of the growing housing recession in the United States.

“There’s not a lot of economic news out there right now that is going to bolster demand in a significant way that we’ll see sales levels return to what they were,” Muir added.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Pacific Aurora Retired Cruise ship selling floating condo’s

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Retired from cruise service, ship will be nice to come home to

Paul Luke
Province

Individual condo cabins on the Pacific Aurora will range from $189,000 to $599,000.

Ahoy, room-matey!

Home hunters and salty dogs with a thirst for buoyant lifestyles can dive right into a condo ship docking soon in the Vancouver area.

Waterfront Lifestyles International, a maritime-lodging company, is selling 22 condo units on a retired cruise ship being renovated at a Lower Mainland shipyard.

Individual condo cabins on the Pacific Aurora range from $189,000 for a single room to $599,000 for a larger suite that sleeps four to six people, Waterfront Lifestyles marketing manager Mark Boyd said yesterday.

The Aurora will be at an area dock five days a week and, two or three weekends a month, take short sightseeing cruises to spots along the Pacific coast such as Victoria, Campbell River or the Sunshine Coast, Boyd said.

“A guy could live on board and go to work downtown,” Boyd said. “Or it could be a home for a retired couple who want an extra bedroom when relatives or friends come to town.”

Once a year, the Aurora will take a more ambitious, two-week voyage to destinations such as San Francisco or Alaska.

Amenities for the ship’s 40 to 50 residents include three meals a day and housekeeping. Among the commonly owned facilities are a dining room, lounge and sun decks.

Waterfront Lifestyles, a unit of Florida-based Marine Growth Ventures, is hiring a local crew to operate, manage and maintain the ship.

Given the costs of onboard life, homeowners’ association annual maintenance fees are a bit steeper than many landlubbers are used to. They range from $12,000 to $32,000, depending on size and location of a unit.

For owners who want to generate an income, a management association will rent their units.

“That’s a good way to offset the annual homeowners’ association fee,” Boyd said. “If you rent it 60 days a year, you’ve basically taken care of your whole fee.”

Renovations to the Aurora — Waterfront Lifestyle is knocking out walls to create larger condo quarters — will be done in one to two months, Boyd said.

In the meantime, buyers deposit 20 per cent of the cost of a unit into an escrow account.

When the renovation is done, Waterfront will take the buyers on a walk-through of the ship they will co-own, Boyd said.

“If they change their mind, their money is fully refunded, with interest,” he said.

The Aurora is the first of five condo ships Waterfront Lifestyles wants to launch over the next 12 months in mid-sized cities.

The next port will likely Tampa, followed by Panama City, Sarasota or Jacksonville — all Florida communities — and Savannah, Ga.

“A lot of these ships are becoming available because the cruise lines are retiring their smaller inventory,” Boyd said. “They’re no longer economic to operate as cruise ships but they’re ideal for what we want to do.”

Units on a condo ship operated by an unrelated company sell for several million dollars each, Boyd said. “We’re offering something that’s far more affordable.”

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

Vancouver prices are dropping & # of listings have increased by 44%

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Rise in listings helps soften once-hot market

Katie Mercer
Province

Real-estate prices in Greater Vancouver are dropping and the number of listings is increasing, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver said yesterday.

The changes continue a recent, dramatic departure from the searing housing market of recent years, when annual price increases in the double-digit percentages were common.

Housing prices in every category have continued to decline since May, the board said.

“We’re seeing more price reductions in properties listed on the market, which is having a levelling impact on the housing price increases experienced at the end of last year and into the first quarter of 2008,” board president Dave Watt said in a news release.

The benchmark price for residential properties has declined 2.1 per cent since May, hitting $556,605 at the end of July.

The board reported 2,174 property sales in July, a 44-per-cent decline from July last year. July listings this year increased 24 per cent over July 2007 to 6,104.

The drop in prices cover all property types, the report said.

Since the end of May, the average detached home has declined 2.3 per cent, townhouses one per cent and apartments two per cent.

The price of housing in all categories last month was higher than in July 2007.

Last month the average price of a detached home was $753,165, up 5.4 per cent from July last year.

The number of homes sold from May to July 2008 declined 44 per cent from the same period last year.

In July, a typical townhouse was $473,953, 5.7 per cent higher than July 2007. Property sales declined 46.8 per cent with 381 units sold.

The typical price of an apartment in July was $381,687, 4.7 per cent higher than July 2007. A total 966 units were sold, down 42.3 per cent from last year.

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

Meet A-Z: The computer hacker behind a cybercrime wave

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Byron Acohido
USA Today

Web security expert Don Jackson is hunting the hacker known as A-Z and has even had chats with the “well-spoken, business-savvy and discreet” man. By Allison Diaz for USA TODAY

He goes by the nickname A-Z and is one of Russia‘s bright young tech stars. He’s a crack programmer, successful entrepreneur and creator of sophisticated software tools that help his customers make millions.

Trouble is, A-Z’s masterstroke is a computer program called ZeuS that helps cybergangs steal people’s identity data and pull off Web scams on a vast scale. Last fall, German criminals used ZeuS to pull off an Ocean’s Eleven-like caper, hijacking $6 million from banks in the United States, United Kingdom, Spain and Italy, says SecureWorks, an Atlanta-based company that monitors Internet crime and supplies security systems for 2,100 companies and government agencies.

A few years ago, skilled hackers such as A-Z concentrated most of their efforts on setting loose globe-spanning Internet viruses, mainly for bragging rights. But cybercrime is now a fast-expanding, global industry, security researchers and law enforcement officials say. Because it most often goes undetected and unreported, cybercrime is difficult to measure. A benchmark widely cited by the tech-security community is that its value tops $100 billion a year, outpacing global drug trafficking.

“All you need is a computer, Internet access and programming skills, and now you have a viable career path in front of you,” says Nick Newman, a computer crime specialist at the National White Collar Crime Center, a federally funded non-profit that trains local law enforcement. “It’s easy money, and because the Internet is anonymous you don’t think you’ll ever get caught.”

A-Z is an archetypical new-generation hacker. No one outside of his close associates knows his true identity, virus hunters say. But security researchers and government authorities have exhaustively triangulated his presence in the cyber-underworld for nearly two years. Based on A-Z’s marketing activities in Russian chat rooms and forums, and distinctive coding signatures in ZeuS, investigators peg him to be a male in his early 20s, living in Moscow, working full time as an independent software developer for hire.

“He’s well-spoken, business-savvy and discreet,” says Don Jackson, a senior researcher at SecureWorks who has investigated A-Z’s movements online. Jackson belongs to a fraternity of about 200 other professional virus hunters who shadow hackers and scrutinize Internet traffic to flush out data-stealing programs and curtail Web scams. A-Z is “very careful to maintain a professional image, and he always leaves his clients wanting more.”

Crafting a sneaky ZeuS

Hackers such as A-Z craft the code that enables crime groups to continually inundate your e-mail inbox with spam scams and taint millions of popular Web pages with snares to take control of your PC.

Cybercrime has evolved into big business and created a market for highly specialized individuals,” says Steve Santorelli, director of investigations at research firm Team Cymru, who has studied how ZeuS helps cyber-intruders control infected computers. A-Z identified an underserved market niche and hustled to fill it, Jackson says. He recognized latent demand for software that could more efficiently infect home and workplace PCs and turn them into bots — obedient machines that could be controlled remotely without the owners’ knowledge or consent. Cybergangs now routinely assemble thousands of infected PCs in networks, called botnets, which they then use to spread spam, infect other computers, steal data and hijack online accounts.

A-Z perfected ZeuS — a customizable botnet creation and management program that readily slips through computer firewalls and sidesteps detection by anti-virus filters. He began hawking ZeuS for $3,000 on Internet forums, where hackers and scammers congregate. By early 2007, ZeuS began to catch on, according to reports from Sunbelt Software, Symantec, McAfee, Kaspersky Lab, Finjan and other security firms.

One customer used ZeuS to steal user names and passwords from patrons of a Russian online stock-trading site. Another used ZeuS to take control of at least 150,000 PCs and encrypt personal files stored on the hard drives, leaving behind a ransom note demanding $300 for the keys to decrypt the files.

ZeuS was also deployed to swipe 1.6 million sensitive records from job seekers at Monster.com and several other online job sites. Monster has since taken an “extremely aggressive approach” to preventing fraud, says spokesman Steve Sylven. “We continually refine our site technologies to prevent unauthorized access to Monster services,” he says.

ZeuS was so effective that it inspired cheap knockoffs. This cut into A-Z’s revenue and tarnished his reputation, Jackson says. “His money began to dry up when U.S. and German groups began selling counterfeit versions.”

Much as a young Bill Gates did when hackers began to pirate early versions of Microsoft Windows, A-Z took steps to prevent the theft of his intellectual property, Jackson says. A version of ZeuS began to circulate with a statement strictly limiting the purchaser’s use of his brainchild. Violators, A-Z warned, would have key coding revealed to the anti-virus companies, effectively neutralizing their copies of ZeuS.

In spring 2007, soon after the restricted version of ZeuS showed up, A-Z adopted a lower profile. He stopped advertising ZeuS for sale on criminal forums and began supplying ZeuS only to repeat or referred customers, Jackson says.

Theft on a grand scale

In early summer 2007, A-Z agreed to form a partnership with a German cybergang to pursue an ambitious heist worthy of a Hollywood thriller, Jackson says. The gang was known for executing “man-in-the-middle” attacks. This involved infecting a PC with a virus that sits dormant until the user logs into an online bank account. The virus then comes alive and tries to execute a cash transfer to an account controlled by the crooks — while the victim is logged on and doing other banking, says Ken Dunham, research director at iSight Partners, a Dallas-based risk-management firm.

“The really bad actors are using code that can mess with your transactions on the fly,” says Dunham. “They’re manipulating what comes into and leaves your browser in real time.”

Still, man-in-the-middle attacks are notoriously hit-and-miss. Some banks have moved to thwart them by only allowing cash transfers from commercial accounts, and requiring bank patrons to type in a special code, called a security certificate.

Jackson caught wind of the alliance between A-Z and the German gang and began reporting on it within tech-security circles. Here is what Jackson has extensively documented about the partnership’s elaborate caper:

It was executed in two stages. In Stage 1, the gang sent millions of spam e-mail messages purporting to carry a Web link to Father’s Day greeting cards, celebrity videos, stories on real and bogus news events and other ruses. Anyone who clicked on such a link received an error message — and the PC got infected. A generic version of ZeuS then began to harvest all data typed by the PC user on any Web forms: shopping pages, online applications, account logon pages and the like. ZeuS also slotted each infected PC into a large botnet standing at the ready and awaiting further commands.

Through the summer and fall, gang members combed through the stolen data that poured in from generic ZeuS infections. They were on the hunt for PC users with online access to commercial bank accounts equipped with the ability to make online cash transfers. By November, the gang had a list of several thousand such accounts and was ready to move to Stage 2, which hinged on a “spear phishing” campaign, Jackson says.

Generic phishing scams that try to trick people into typing their usernames and passwords at spoofed Web pages are typically mass-e-mailed indiscriminately. By contrast, spear phishers target specific individuals. The gang began spear phishing the commercial bank account holders.

The e-mails advised the account holders that their security certificates were “out of sync” and asked them to “click here” to reset them. Since the messages included great detail about the individual and did not ask for any sensitive data, the ruse was “very convincing,” Jackson says.

According to Jackson, several thousand online banking patrons fell for the ruse and clicked on the hyperlink. A fresh copy of their security certificate, indeed, popped up. But a fresh infection also got installed: a customized version of ZeuS tweaked by A-Z to alert the gang the next time the PC user logged into the account, Jackson says.

Anticipating that ZeuS would reel in thousands of such alerts, A-Z prepared the botnet created in Stage 1 to lend a helping hand. Jackson says the botnet was set to automatically react to alerts. Each alert triggered a cash transfer of $5,000 to $10,000 that took only a few seconds to complete, he says. According to SecureWorks, British law enforcement and affected banks compiled an estimate of ZeuS‘ total take over the course of two weeks: $6 million.

A break in the case came when Jackson discovered a computer server in Turkey where the gang stored instructions for making cash deposits into accounts it controlled. Network operators in the U.K., Germany and Turkey cooperated with U.S. law enforcement to shut down the server and curtail the scam, SecureWorks says.

Though the robbery was widely discussed in tech-security circles, the names of the banks that suffered losses were never disclosed. Members of the German gang and A-Z remain at large and under investigation by U.S. authorities. The FBI and U.S. Secret Service declined comment.

As a rule, tech-security firms help banks under non-disclosure agreements. The names of the 20 affected banks have remained undisclosed.

Hacker’s free to ‘live large’

Pursuing cybercrooks, especially hackers who mainly write code, is a low priority for Russian police, says John Pironti, a banking security expert at systems integration firm Getronics. As long as A-Z doesn’t leave Russia, he is effectively beyond the rule of law. “Unless he causes someone physical or political harm, he can live large,” Pironti says.

A-Z, in fact, has admirers in legitimate tech circles. Yuval Ben-Itzhak, a virus hunter at San Jose-based security firm Finjan, marvels at the finesse it took to develop ZeuS. “To write a program that needs to run on millions of PCs all around the world and not break them is truly an art,” Ben-Itzhak says. “I’m telling you, I’d be willing to hire a person like this at any price.”

In online chats, Jackson says, A-Z has told him that he presumes his clients used ZeuS strictly for legal endeavors, and expressed a desire to be taken seriously as a programmer. In one chat session, A-Z divulged his goal to earn enough to trade in his 1995 Zhiguli sedan for a Mercedes-Benz SLR sports coupe. In another chat, Jackson asked A-Z about ZeuS‘ history of being used for mass infections and other criminal activity. Jackson says the hacker insisted that his materials are provided for research purposes and said that he could not control his clients’ actions.

Such facile answers come as no surprise to security experts and social scientists who track the behavior of hackers and scammers immersed in a virtual world where cheating and stealing — and getting away with it — are badges of honor.

“Unfortunately, many of these new specialists rationalize their actions in the absence of ethical guidance,” says Santorelli of Team Cymru. “They represent a serious challenge to those who seek to protect Internet users.”

 

Olympus, Matsushita to offer smaller SLR cameras

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Kiyoshi Takenaka, Reuters
Sun

TOKYO – Japan‘s Olympus Corp and Matsushita announced a new digital camera format on Tuesday that will make single lens reflex (SLR) models smaller and lighter, in a bid to drive sales of their advanced machines.

SLR cameras, which are high-end models with interchangeable lenses, are the most lucrative and fastest growing segment of the overall digital camera market.

But some compact digital camera users are reluctant to move up to SLR models because they are bulkier and heavier.

The new format, called the Micro Four Thirds System, would make digital SLR cameras thinner and lens units smaller than those based on the existing Four Thirds System.

The Four Thirds System is an open standard that specifies the size of the imaging sensor and lens mount, ensuring compatibility of lenses between products.

Olympus and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd, maker of Panasonic brand electronics, offer digital SLR cameras based on the Four Thirds standard, while Sigma Corp makes Four Thirds-based lenses.

“Packing high picture quality into a body thin enough to slide into a pocket. That is the basic concept of Micro Four Thirds,” Haruo Ogawa, head of Olympus Imaging Corp’s SLR business division, told a news conference.

Olympus Imaging is Olympus Corp’s digital camera subsidiary.

Matsushita and Olympus did not disclose the actual size or design of their new cameras based on the new standard, and declined to comment on prices and launch timing.

Olympus is the world’s fourth-largest digital SLR camera maker behind Canon Inc, Nikon Corp and Sony Corp. Matsushita ranks sixth.

© Reuters 2008

 

Downtown office space tightens more

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Vacancy rate of 2.06 per cent to drop to 0.3 per cent by 2010, real estate firm says

Derrick Penner
Sun

With downtown Vancouver’s office-vacancy rate at a record low and set to ratchet down even further, at least one commercial realtor is musing about how pressure on the market will be relieved.

Barclay Street Real Estate’s second-quarter report counts just 400,000 square feet of vacant space of the 19.4-million square feet of space that it tracks in downtown buildings, a mere 2.06-per-cent vacancy rate.

Although leasing activity has slowed, the firm expects tenants to take up another 184,000 square feet of that space by the end of 2008, leaving vacancy at just 1.1 per cent, a level it expects to hold through 2009 then possibly even drop to 0.3 per cent in 2010.

“Office leasing in Vancouver continues to confound and amaze us,” the report said.

Other Vancouver-based commercial realtors, however, have estimated the downtown office market to already be in a tighter spot. Colliers International, tracking a larger area of the downtown peninsula, puts vacancy at 1.7 per cent.

And in Barclay Street‘s assessment, “[The] downtown Vancouver market is falling into an interesting trap,” with not enough space to meet the demand of typical downtown tenants — smaller professional firms — but too few big head-office tenants to underwrite the construction of new buildings.

The Barclay Street report said leasing activity in downtown has slowed, largely because brokers can’t find spaces in the 2,000-5,000-square-foot range for those “bread and butter” clients.

And there is little new office space being built, with plans for at least one prospective tower put on hold — the Aquilini Investment Group/Tripower Development proposal for a 24-storey, 236,000-square-foot building, including 197,000 square feet of office space.

“We are watching with interest to see how the market corrects,” the Barclay Street report states.

The possibilities range from an economic downturn that could force vacancies, to tenants leaving offices downtown for the growing number of office-park projects being built on spec in suburbs like Burnaby and Richmond.

Last week, The Vancouver Sun reported on the office construction picture, with 477,020 square feet of office space currently being built in Burnaby, and another 1.5 million-to-1.8 million in the planning stages, compared with just 185,500 square feet under construction downtown, according to commercial realtor Avison Young.

That being said, Colliers’ second-quarter report noted that the 500,000 square feet of new office space completed across Metro Vancouver in 2007 represented an all-time low.

There are proposals on the books to build about 1.2 million square feet of offices downtown, but those include the Aquilini/Tripower proposal that is on hold, as well as a plan by B.C. Investment Management Corp. and Bentall Real Estate that isn’t even at the pre-leasing stage.

“Downtown tenants need buildings, and suburban developers need tenants,” the Barclay Street report said. “We may start to see them get together more often.”

The remaining question, Barclay Street said in the report, is whether “vacancy [will] keep tightening down and rents keep rising until one of the large downtown tenants needs more space and has no choice but to pre-lease a new project.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

High cost of long-term mortgage

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

You’ll fork out a huge lump of extra interest on a 40-year plan

Jim Yih
Province

Foreclosed house up for sale in Las Vegas, Nev., demonstrates why Ottawa wants to prevent the fiasco that is happening in the U.S. housing market. Getty Images file photo

Don’t pay until 2048 has become a very attractive plan for Canadian homebuyers. But if that’s not enough incentive, the mortgage institutions have also introduced zero-equity mortgages (no down payment) and interest-only loans. These options have become especially attractive for first-time homebuyers.

Recently, the federal government announced new rules to eliminate 40-year mortgages and zero-down mortgage options. By Oct. 15, you must have a minimum down payment of five per cent and the longest amortization will be 35 years.

The main reason anyone would choose a 40-year mortgage is affordability, and you can blame that on the rising Canadian housing market. Extending the amortization lowers your monthly payments and allows you to get a bigger mortgage for the same payment.

Let’s look at a few simple numbers.

On a $100,000 mortgage at six per cent, with what used to be a normal amortization of 25 years, monthly payments would be $640. Extending the amortization to 40 years would lower the payment to $545. That means you can spend $95 on something other than your mortgage.

Another way to look at this is if you could afford the $640 payments, but you extended the amortization to 40 years, you could now borrow $17,500 and get a more expensive house. Or what some people have done is spent the extra $17,500 for renovations.

Although longer amortizations create greater affordability for housing, it comes at a big price. Lowering the monthly payments simply means we can go into more debt, and more debt means more interest and less equity. These two things are sure to slow down your path to financial freedom.

With the 25-year amortization and at the same six-per-cent interest, you will make a total of $191,943 in payments. That means your $100,000 mortgage cost you $91,943 of interest over 25 years. On a 40-year amortization, your total interest jumps more than 75 per cent to $161,643.

In many cases, you will pay more interest than the original price of the house you buy.

A 40-year amortization will save you $95 per month in payments, but at a cost of an extra $70,000 of interest on a $100,000 mortgage.

There’s no question the government is doing the right thing in preventing people from extending the amortization periods too far. They obviously want to prevent the fiasco that is happening in the U.S. housing market from occurring in Canada.

Moving from a 40-year mortgage to 35 years will save you $24,238 in interest on the same six-per-cent $100,000-mortgage. But you will still pay $137,405 in interest.

It used to be that before you could buy, you had to show you had some financial discipline. Not only did you have to save a significant down payment, but you also had to afford a 25-year amortization.

Some new homebuyers will argue that rising house prices make it impossible to enter the housing market, but remember that buying a home should be a result of some good initial habits. We live in a world that encourages debt — the biggest cancer to financial freedom.

Creating more access to debt may improve our perceived lifestyle, but it comes at a significant price. Just take a look at what too much debt has done to people south of the border.

© The Vancouver Province 2008