Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Targeted cyber attacks to rise further: Symantec

HELSINKI (Reuters) – Targeted cyber attacks will pose a growing threat to companies around the world this year after the Stuxnet worm hit Iran's nuclear program in 2010, security software maker Symantec Corp said on Tuesday.

"Last year was the year of high-profile targeted attacks. We will see so many more," said Sian John, security strategist at Symantec.

So-called targeted attacks succeed as most consumers avoid clicking on suspicious links in spam emails, but open files that seem to arrive from legitimate senders.

"They are more challenging, but the return is higher," John said.

In total, the number of measured Web-based attacks rose 93 percent in 2010 from a year ago, boosted by proliferation of shortened Internet addresses, Symantec said in its annual threat review.

"Last year, attackers posted millions of these shortened links on social networking sites to trick victims into both phishing and malware attacks, dramatically increasing the rate of successful infection," Symantec said.

Social networking sites are increasingly important platform for attackers as their popularity among consumers is rising fast.

The software company said attacks on leading mobile platforms were also set to increase after a 42 percent rise in mobile vulnerabilities last year.

"The major mobile platforms are finally becoming ubiquitous enough to garner the attention of attackers," Symantec said. "Attackers are really following the consumers here."

(Editing by Andre Grenon)

Windows Phone 7 Jailbreak Updates Your Phone

A developer behind the short-lived ChevronWP7 jailbreak for Windows Phone 7 has released a hack that lets you bypass Microsoft and carriers to download WP7 updates on your own.

"I don't care which carrier you are on, which phone you have, it'll just update your phone accordingly," wrote Chris Walsh in a blog post.

The tool is meant to address recent, controversial delays to releasing WP7 updates. The glitches prompted Microsoft to halt a minor update on Samsung smartphones.

Walsh used Microsoft's own support tool to create a program that applies all WP7 updates at once. This includes "NoDo," which brings features like cut and paste to WP7 phones. The official updates are supposed to roll out on Tuesday, starting with the HTC HD7. Typically, Microsoft works with carriers to send over-the-air software updates.

"We really have to commend Microsoft here for being able to split up the OS updates into differential packs, which saves users downloading 200+ MB updates, unlike the IFruit updates," he added, referring to Apple.

As Walsh's instructions note, users need to download Microsoft's Windows Phone Support Tool before executing the ChevronWP7 Updater program. Walsh added a disclaimer saying downloading the hack will void your phone's warranty.

"There is NO revert process, again, flash at your own risk," he wrote.

Last November, Walsh, along with Rafael Rivera and Long Zheng, created a homebrew jailbreak called ChevronWP7 that unlocked the operating system. By January Microsoft had shut it down.

Best Tv's

Cast your eyes over the hottest HDTVs, the perfect TVs for gaming and the latest cutting-edge 3D TVs on the market that no living room should be without



1. Philips 46PFL9705H
£1,960 www.philips.co.uk

Performance: This cutting-edge set includes NetTV and a Wi-Fi browser that lets you explore the whole web, not just app content. It’s 3D-ready via a bundled
transmitter. Picture quality is outstanding
Love: Superb 2D and 3D picture. Exceptional sonics. Open internet browsing
Hate: External 3D transmitter. No Freeview HD tuner. Expensive for a 46-incher

MORE Philips 46PFL9705H review




2. Samsung UE46C8790
£1,650, www.samsung.co.uk

Performance: Very thin yet bulging with features, this 46-inch 8000 Series set looks good and produces razor-sharp results in both 2D and 3D. A burgeoning selection of online channels is a bonus
Love: Stunning visuals. DLNA networking
Hate: Settings require adjustment. Price



3. Panasonic P50VT20
£1,685, www.panasonic.co.uk

Performance: Consistently brilliant with both 3D and 2D sources, this is Panasonic’s best plasma TV to date
Love: Super-smooth 3D and 2D. DLNA networking. Freeview HD and Freesat tuners
Hate: Average audio and a clunky interface that’s disgracefully littered with adverts

MORE Panasonic P50VT20 review


4. Panasonic TX-P42G20
£699, www.panasonic.co.uk

Performance:This set is a bona fide bargain, with 42 inches of outstanding hi-def picture, THX-certified audio and both Freeview HD and Freesat tuners
Love: Reasonably priced and well connected. Excellent picture quality
Hate: Dull interface. Could be slimmer


5. Samsung UE46C7000
£1,229, www.samsung.co.uk

Performance: This TV crams in all the “hot in 2010” features: LED lighting, 3D, built-in Freeview HD and online extras such as BBC iPlayer. It is also just 27mm thick
Love: Slimline, sexy looks. Freeview HD,very good picture quality and 3D-ready
Hate: 8000 Series is even better/slimmer