Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

Combating security threats online – Canadian Banks keep clients information secure

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Canadian banking industry invests in infrastructure to keep clients’ information secure on the Web

Jeff Buckstein
Sun

Online banking clients are a potential target as increasingly sophisticated Internet attacks aim to grab critical financial information.

Today’s attacks are taking place more frequently and faster than ever before. Banks and other protectors of sensitive online information now face threats from so-called “zero-day” attacks, says George Kerns, president and chief executive officer of Fusepoint Managed Services Inc., a managed IT solutions provider headquartered in Mississauga, Ont.

“The whole point of a zero-day [attack] means that within 24 hours of most things being known, they’re exploited. [Consequently], there’s very little time to be able to fix it before there’s some kind of impact.”

The banking industry in Canada devotes substantial time, effort and money to combat such threats, stresses Maura Drew-Lytle, director of media relations and communications with the Canadian Bankers Association (CBA) in Toronto.

According to the CBA, clients of the six largest Canadian banks alone — RBC Royal Bank, BMO Bank of Montreal, TD Bank, Scotiabank, CIBC and National Bank of Canada — went online to record nearly 394 million financial transactions in 2007. In 2006, those same banks spent a total of $4.4 billion on their technology infrastructure; between 1996 and 2006, inclusive, they invested $37.6 billion.

“The banks have a lot of personal financial information on their customers, so they understand that protecting that is certainly one of their most important jobs,” says Drew-Lytle. “The banks are always implementing new security procedures” to ensure customer safety, she adds.

BMO Bank of Montreal, for instance, offers clients a number of protective measures. These include enhanced sign-in security to help prevent unauthorized account access, multiple levels of firewalls, and 128-bit encryption to ensure the safety of data passing between parties, among other features.

Lee Dunn, vice-president and chief information security officer at BMO, says the enhanced sign-in features include a personalized graphic and customized phrase users select to appear after they enter their card number. This graphic and phrase combination helps identify the website’s authenticity, after which the user can sign in with their personal identification number. This works two ways: “It gives the customer a confident feeling they are at a legitimate website” and also provides the bank with assurance the customer is who they purport to be, she notes.

BMO also monitors sign-in patterns. If, for instance, a person signs on to their account away from the computer site they normally transact from, the bank will prompt them with a series of supplementary, pre-selected personalized questions to make sure that it is indeed the client who is attempting to sign on, explains Dunn.

But firewalls alone don’t provide enough security. While a firewall can act as an infrastructure layer to try to prevent unauthorized access for certain services, “most hackers today break into the web applications,” which in an online, worldwide banking environment allows them to more easily bypass firewalls, says Stewart Wolfe, KPMG LLP’s leader of security services for the Greater Toronto area.

“Although application layer firewalls provide a level of protection, the secure coding of applications from initial development to production release is key to providing Internet banking web applications that are more resistant to malicious penetration attempts,” Wolfe adds.

This is one reason why additional protection, such as a secure sockets layer (SSL) certificate issued by an authorized third party to certify that a web server belongs to the company it purports to be is essential. Such certificates include 128-bit encryption.

Customers can also arm themselves by becoming aware of the threats they may face and what to do about them.

Phishing attacks, for instance, are a prime example of a malicious attempt to exploit banks and their customers. The idea of a phishing e-mail is to get users on to a so-called “spoof site” that mimics the appearance of an authentic site, says Darrell MacMullin, country manager for PayPal Canada, an online payment solutions provider in Toronto.

Often such correspondence involves urgent requests for banking clients to validate their credentials or register for a type of service when they log onto a false site with their user name and password, so perpetrators can capture the sensitive personal information needed to commit further crimes, adds Wolfe.

“A bank will never send you an e-mail asking you to verify your personal information,” says Drew-Lytle. “They already have it.”

Consequently, it’s essential for users to authenticate that the website they enter is genuine, and never give out sensitive financial information unless they are certain it is. The best way to do this, Wolfe says, is to verify the SSL certificate by clicking on the lock displayed by the Internet Explorer browser. A lock icon will appear when the address prefix in the browser bar changes from http to https.

If clients are contacted by somebody phishing for information illegally, they need to contact their bank immediately, the experts say.

TIPS FOR ONLINE BANKING CLIENTS

Here are some tips from the experts on how online banking clients can protect themselves against phishing attacks — phoney e-mails that attempt to extract valuable personal financial information.

– Be aware that authentic banks will never request that their clients divulge personal information, such as account numbers and passwords, in an e-mail.

– Authenticate the website you are going to is genuine by verifying that it has a secure sockets layer (SSL) certificate.

– Never click on a link in a suspicious e-mail. Instead search out an official bank URL site via your browser bar.

– Never download an attachment from a suspicious e-mail. It may consist of a virus or spyware.

– Contact your bank immediately if you suspect somebody has tried to emulate them online.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Shine’s off the Apple iPod nano

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Shares fall as ‘remix’ package fails to move investors

David Lawsky and Eric Auchard, Reuters
Province

Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs displays a redesigned iPod nano at Apple’s ‘Let’s Rock’ media event in San Francisco, where a new iPod Touch was also released. Robert Galbraith – Reuters

SAN FRANCISCO — A thin and smiling Apple Inc. chief executive Steve Jobs launched a much thinner, curved iPod nano music player and joked about the state of his much-discussed health yesterday.

But shares of Apple fell more than four per cent after the presentation, which had no major surprises for investors. Apple last week invited reporters to a music-related event, stoking expectations of new players. Some had hoped for new computers as well as iPods, but that did not happen.

Jobs introduced a curved aluminum and glass nano — the best-selling iPod — for $149 US with eight gigabytes of storage, $50 less than the predecessor model and a 16-gigabyte version for $199, with up to 24 hours of music playback or four hours of video. He also rolled out a thinner, $229-version of the Internet-connecting iPod Touch with rounded edges and eight gigabytes of storage.

Apple dominates personal digital-music players, with nearly three-quarters of the U.S. market in July, Jobs said, adding the product lineup was strong for gift-giving season.

“I would call it a series of both expected and unexpected announcements. Clearly the new iPod nano in the flesh is certainly more appealing than it’s been. It was expected, but I think it will sell well in the holiday season,” said Michael Abramsky, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets.

He added that Jobs did not look much different from June, when his gaunt frame drew speculation of a recurrence of cancer or other problems and unnerved investors who see him as crucial to the success of the company.

Jobs appeared thin but jaunty as he walked around the stage in his trademark outfit of jeans and long-sleeve black shirt in front of a screen that flashed “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated” — a quotation borrowed from Mark Twain.

In 2004, Jobs, 53, said he had undergone successful surgery to remove a rare type of pancreatic cancer.

Bloomberg News erroneously published a Jobs obituary recently, while investors for months have been concerned about the cancer survivor’s health after he appeared gaunt at another product launch in June.

Apple marketing chief Philip Schiller said video games have emerged as the first big category of applications on the iPhone and iPod Touch. He said 700 of the roughly 3,000 applications sold on Apple’s AppStore were games, the largest software category.

“Apple tends not to think in terms of demographics,” Schiller told Reuters in an interview. But he added: “You are likely to see more people using iPod nano than a Touch in athletics. If you are a kid who plays lots of games, perhaps you would be more likely to own a Touch.”

Apple also said new nano has a “shake to shuffle” feature that changes songs as the player itself is jiggled and that General Electric Co.’s television broadcaster, NBC, had rejoined online video and music store iTunes.

Apple stock slid $5.09, or about 3.2 per cent, to $152.83 in afternoon Nasdaq trading.

The stock had been off just over $40, or a little over 20 per cent in the year-to-date, but has weathered the sell-off in stocks tied to the U.S. credit crunch far better than most other shares, including many technology names.

By contrast, once high-flying Google Inc. is off almost 40 per cent this year.

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

RIM launches first flip-phone BlackBerry

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Wojtek Dabrowski, Reuters
Sun

A BlackBerry Pearl smartphone is seen in an illustration released to Reuters by Brodeur Partners September 10, 2008. Research In Motion Ltd is launching a flip version of its popular BlackBerry Pearl smartphone, a move that reasserts its push into the retail consumer market. Like RIM’s original Pearl model, the first-ever flip BlackBerry comes loaded with multimedia features such as a video and music player and a 2-megapixel camera with flash, as well as a Web browser and an abridged keyboard.

TORONTO – Research In Motion Ltd is launching a flip version of its popular BlackBerry Pearl smartphone, a move that reasserts its push into the retail consumer market.

Like RIM’s original Pearl model, the first-ever flip BlackBerry comes loaded with multimedia features such as a video and music player and a 2-megapixel camera with flash, as well as a Web browser and an abridged keyboard.

“Seventy per cent of the mobile phone users in the United States use a flip,” RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie said in an interview. “There’s never been a smartphone or a BlackBerry option for that.”

He added the new device is “extremely important” to capturing more retail users.

The new clamshell flip BlackBerry will be available around the world starting this autumn. In the United States, T-Mobile will be the exclusive launch carrier. No pricing details were immediately available.

The first, candy-bar-shaped version of the Pearl was launched in September 2006 to rave reviews and strong sales. Its success was a key factor behind the Waterloo, Ontario-based company’s ability to deliver banner results throughout the rest of that year and in 2007.

The Pearl also allowed RIM to broaden its market beyond its mainstay of executives, lawyers, politicians and other professionals who use the BlackBerry to send work e-mail securely.

RIM has more than 16 million subscribers. It says that “non-enterprise” customers — the company’s term for small and medium businesses and consumers — now represent more than 40 percent of that total.

The drive for retail consumers has put the company in more direct competition with hardware makers such as Apple and its iPhone, as well as Motorola and Nokia . Balsillie has repeatedly dismissed competitive concerns and they have yet to translate into lower sales.

Despite that, RIM’s shares have lost a third of their value since setting a year high of $148.13 on the Nasdaq in June. On Tuesday, they closed at $99.30 amid macroeconomic concerns and broad stock market declines.

Most analysts continue to recommend RIM’s shares to investors, according to Reuters Knowledge. Some cite a strong slate of upcoming product launches including the recently unveiled BlackBerry Bold, as well as continuing strong demand for smartphones.

Asked whether the market should expect RIM to launch additional BlackBerry models before the end of the calendar year, Balsillie replied: “We’re far from done.”

© Reuters 2008

 

Google cuts how long it stores users’ personal data

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Eric Auchard, Reuters
Sun

Photograph by : Getty Images

MOUNTAIN VIEW, California – Google Inc has halved the amount of time it stores personal data gathered from its users’ Web surfing habits, a move aimed at improving its privacy policies, a company official said.

Google used to store such data for 18 months, but has now trimmed that duration to nine months.

Nicole Wong, Google’s deputy general counsel, told a meeting of computer industry privacy experts at Microsoft Corp’s Silicon Valley offices that her company planned to “anonymize” the computer addresses of its users more quickly.

“We’re significantly shortening our previous 18-month retention policy to address regulatory concerns and to take another step to improve privacy for our users,” Google officials said in a blog post released Monday night.

Peter Cullen, chief privacy strategist for Microsoft Corp , said Google’s move was done in response to pressure from European regulators and by industry rivals.

Cullen, who was taking part in panel discussion with Wong, said that until a year-and-a-half ago, Google had kept personally identifiable information about its Web users on company computers for an indefinite amount of time.

Google adopted an 18-month privacy policy only after pressure from the European Union, he said.

© Reuters 2008

 

Apple’s new iPod shuffles when shaken

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Jefferson Graham
USA Today

The new line of iPod Nanos — By Justin Sullivan, Getty Images

SAN FRANCISCO — Shake, shake, shake that iPod.

Apple Tuesday introduced new iPod digital music players, highlighted by a redesigned Nano that plays a new song when you shake it.

At a press event here, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the new Nano — available with 8 gigabytes of storage for $149 — will be in stores this week. A $199 Nano with 16 GB of storage will be in stores by the weekend, Jobs added.

The Nano advances songs using the same motion sensor technology found in Apple’s popular iPhone.

About 160 million iPods have been sold since the music players were released in 2001. But the iPod’s mindshare has been seemingly dwarfed by the iPhone, which also plays music. The iPhone was released July 11, and seven million phones have sold since.

Along with the new iPhone, Apple introduced the App Store, to sell or give away software for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Jobs said that over 100 million applications have been downloaded since the store opened July 11. “This is mindblowing,” he said. “100 million applications in 60 days.”

New software was released today to fix many of the problems iPhone users have experienced. The “2.1 update” will fix such things as dropped calls and crashed applications. Jobs said. It also will improve iPhone battery life, he added.

Apple also updated its iPod Touch — which is identical to the iPhone, except without the phone — with a new, thinner version. The revamped iPod Touch sells for $229 (8 GB, down from $299), $299 (16 GB) and $399 (32 GB.)

The new iPod Touch, available today, is being repositioned as a gaming device, to take advantage of the many games sold at the App Store. Apple’s new ad calls the Touch “the funnest iPod ever.”

iPods had a 73% market share in July, Jobs said, citing numbers from market tracker NPD Group.

Apple also introduced a new version of its iTunes software for listening to music and watching entertainment that makes “genius” playlists. The software makes instant playlists based on the first song played, suggesting similar music. For instance, Jobs demonstrated with Elvis Presley’s “Heartbreak Hotel,” and it was followed by songs by Roy Orbison, Buddy Holly and the Doors.

iTunes also sells TV shows for viewing, and Jobs says they will now be available in high-definition. Standard definition shows sell for $1.99; hi-def for $2.99. NBC, which left iTunes in a dispute over pricing, has returned, Jobs said.

Keyboard doubles as scanner

Saturday, September 6th, 2008

Sun

KeyScan KS810, Keyscan

GrooveTooth Talk, Cygnett

W350 Walkman, Sony Ericsson

DS-61 digital voice recorder, Olympus

1. KeyScan KS810, Keyscan, $160

Clear some of the clutter from your desk with a keyboard that incorporates a full-page colour scanner. Taking the same space as a standard keyboard, it scans a full page when a document is inserted into its scanner slot. The document is automatically converted into a searchable PDF e-mail attachment. You can also use it to copy, fax or save documents as PDF, Word, JPG or other formats. Compatible with Windows XP-SP2 or higher and Vista 32. Check it out at www.keyscan.com.

2. GrooveTooth Talk, Cygnett, $80

A hands-free speaker system for Bluetooth-enabled mobile phones, including Apple’s new iPhone 3G and BlackBerry devices, this is a useful gadget particularly with an increasing number of jurisdictions turning thumbs down on drivers who juggle a cellphone in one hand and the wheel in another. A rechargeable lithium polymer battery has seven hours of talk time and 460 hours on standby. With a magnetic clip that attaches to your car’s visor or air vent, it recharges with a car adaptor or via a USB cable to your computer. www.cygnett.com

3. W350 Walkman, Sony Ericsson, $30 with three-year plan from Rogers

For the student who changes phones as often as school binders, the latest music player phone from Sony Ericsson delivers the Walkman player with track recognition for songs combined with an FM radio and a 1.3 megapixel camera with a four times zoom. At just under 11 mm, it’s a slim player with dedicated music keys on the flip cover so you don’t have to open it to run your music. Combined with all the other necessities from SMS to e-mail, it’s a budget player that fits the bill for back to school. www.rogers.com

4. DS-61 digital voice recorder, Olympus, $320

Olympus has introduced its new DS-series recorders that include the DS-61 and DS-71 along with the DS-2300. The DS-61 and 71 come with expanded internal memory with the DS-61 at two gigabytes and the DS-71 at four gigs. Recording time is increased to 530 hours for the DS-61 and 1,062 hours for the DS-71. Both have an enhanced voice confirmation function that helps users through an automated voice guide that goes through onscreen menus and reports on how much battery life is left. Intro scan playback lets users scan long recordings quickly to find a file. www.olympuscanada.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Archos 5 Internet Mobile Tablet Featuring a 5 Inch Touch Screen that plays music, Video Files, WIFI Capable & Flash Player with 120 GB of Storage – www.archos.com

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Cool tablet, flashy Bluetooth and a microwave for your car

Lowell Conn
Sun

Archos 5 Internet Mobile Tablet

Funkwerk America’s EGO Flash

12V In-Car Microwave

1. Hubba, hubba, says the gadget geek inside: Like any good consumer electronics purveyor, Archos understands “wow” value. Each new product from this personal media player maker arrives with sweet new features worthy of inclusion into the hearts and minds of gadget geeks everywhere. But it must be reaching a ceiling of ingenuity with the new Archos 5 Internet Mobile Tablet — it’s just so darn cool I cannot imagine what the company could possibly come up with next.

Featuring a five-inch touch screen, the ability to play music and video files, WiFi capability, an integrated Flash player and 120 gigabytes of storage, this is the product you attach to your television, record as many programs as possible and then watch them all during the rush hour commute. $400 US, visit www.archos.com

2. Sharp, flashy Bluetooth: It’s not just because I enjoy saying Funkwerk that I present Funkwerk America‘s EGO Flash. I am also writing about this product to commemorate the manufacturer’s partnership with new Canadian master distributor Hitfar — another name I like to say out loud. A sharp Bluetooth hands-free multimedia system that combines an OLED display with hands-free capability, the Flash throws in an MP3 player for good measure.

Featuring voice recognition out of the box — meaning one doesn’t have to “train” the system — the device integrates with the car stereo system to mute sound when a call comes in. Another nice feature built into this puppy is the ability to transmit incoming text messages onscreen — although you might wish to disable this feature if your significant other is around and there is the possibility that a more clandestine significant other will transmit a message to you. $250 US, visit www.egohandsfree.com

3. Nuke food on the go: The amazing thing about the 12V In-Car Microwave, available from U.K. distributor Maplin, is not that the technology exists but that it would be created. I am hard-pressed to imagine an instance where I would cook a meal on the drive, much less choose to operate a microwave product in such closed quarters. The device arrives with an LED touch screen, up to 660 watts, which should be just enough for Pizza Pockets, can be powered as its name suggests via the car’s 12-volt cigarette lighter adapter and basically is what it is, nothing more or less. To be fair, though, this product is probably intended for RVs, camping and tailgating, but marketers probably do not wish to narrow the field of buyers by admitting such a thing. $156, visit www.maplin.co.uk

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Virus protection crucial to prevent intrusions

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Steve Makris
Sun

Laptops are an easy target, both from thieves operating nearby and others on the Internet. Portable cable locks can protect you from computer theft, and software tracking devices can be purchased that broadcast their presence on the Internet the first time a stolen computer goes online.

Any computer you buy today should include virus protection and, for younger users, parental controls. Windows Vista and Mac OS X Leopard include parental controls for limiting the time, specific Internet access and activities on computers. It’s also smart to place the family home computer in a public area where parents can oversee a child’s digital activity.

Virus protection is a must. Bruce Cowper, Microsoft Canada Chief Security Advisor, warns that today’s massive social networking activity — there are 700,000 Facebook users in Calgary and more than two million in Toronto — brings certain risks.

where phishing [luring unsuspected users to a fake Internet site] is becoming more common on social networking sites than traditional e-mail,” he said. “There is an implied trust when you log in your social networking site that everything will be fine. That’s not the case anymore.”

Cowper said antivirus, phishing and spam software from McAfee, Symantec or Microsoft’s subscription-based Windows Live OneCare, constantly monitor and compare background online activity for possible malicious intrusions.

“Even the most careful and seasoned computer users can’t do without proper antivirus software,” said Cowper.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Google goes browsing with shiny, new Chrome

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

New interface will go head-on with Microsoft

Google unveils its own Web browser

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Eric Auchard
Sun

A panel from a comic book released by Google on September 1, 2008 to introduce the Chrome web browser. Photograph by : Google/Handout/Reuters

Web search engine page Google is shown on a computer screen with a black background to support Earth Hour in this photo taken in Toronto, March 29, 2008. Google has lost another junior member of its executive team as Chief Information Officer Douglas Merrill is leaving to join music company EMI, a source close to EMI said on Tuesday. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc is set to introduce on Tuesday a new Web browser designed to more quickly handle video-rich applications, posing a challenge to browsers designed originally to handle text and graphics.

Google officials confirmed news of long-rumored plans to offer its own Web browsing software, entitled Google Chrome, in a company blog post after it mistakenly mailed details of the project to a Google-watching blog, called Blogoscoped.com.

The company statement calls the move “a fresh take on the browser” and said it will be introducing a public trial of the Web browser for Microsoft Corp Windows users on Tuesday. Details can be found at http://tinyurl.com/gchrome.

The Internet search leader is also working on versions for Apple Macintosh users and for Linux devices, Google said.

The launch of Chrome coincides with the recent introduction by arch-rival Microsoft of its Internet Explorer 8 last month. Internet Explorer has roughly three-quarters of the browser market, followed by Mozilla’s Firefox and Apple’s Safari.

Google said its engineers had borrowed from a variety of other open-source projects, including Apple Inc’s WebKit and the Mozilla Firefox open-source browser. As a result, Google plans to make all of Chrome software code open to other developers to enhance and expand, the company said.

“We realized that the Web had evolved from mainly simple text pages to rich, interactive applications and that we needed to completely rethink the browser,” Google Vice President of Product Management Sindar Pichai and Engineering Director Linus Upson said in a jointly authored blog post.

BUILT FOR SPEED

They said Google Chrome promises to load pages faster and more securely, but it also includes a new engine for loading interactive JavaScript code, dubbed V8, that is designed to run the next generation of not-yet-invented Web applications.

“What we really needed was not just a browser, but also a modern platform for web pages and applications, and that’s what we set out to build,” Pichai and Upson wrote.

A Google spokesman declined to comment beyond the blog post.

“The browser landscape is highly competitive,” Dean Hachamovitch, general manager of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, said in a statement.

“People will choose Internet Explorer 8 for the way it puts the services they want right at their fingertips, respects their personal choices about how they want to browse and, more than any other browsing technology, (it) puts them in control of their personal data online,” Hachamovitch said.

GOING ‘INCOGNITO’

Google confirmed that it had prematurely mailed a copy of a comic book. Blogoscope’s writer, Philipp Lenssen, scanned and published the 38-page comic at http://blogoscoped.com/google-chrome/.

Chrome organizes information into tabbed pages. Web programs can be launched in their own dedicated windows. It also offers a variety of features to make the browser more stable and secure, according to the comic book guide.

Among Chrome’s features is a special privacy mode that lets users create an “incognito” window where “nothing that occurs in that window is ever logged on your computer.” This is a read-only feature with access to one’s bookmarks of favorite sites.

Once available for testing on Tuesday, the browser can be downloaded at http://www.google.com/chrome.

© Reuters 2008