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Week in Geek: FBI Plans to Increase Monitoring of Social Networks
Written by Asian Angel   
Sunday, 29 January 2012 06:00
FG_AUTHORS: Asian Angel This week’s edition of WIG is filled with news link goodness covering topics such as the botnet apps found in the official Google Android Market, Mozilla’s plans to add a reset button to Firefox, the operator of the Kelihos botnet was a former anti-virus firm employee, and more. Photo by phillip torrone. Weekly News Links FBI to step up monitoring of social media sites amid privacy concernsThe FBI plans to step up the monitoring of social networks like Facebook and Twitter, and has asked for help building an app to constantly monitor the sites. Twitter to censor content in some countriesTwitter says it will block tweets, if and when required, from users in specific countries rather than implement a worldwide filter. The move signals a marked change for the microblogging service deemed pivotal in the uprisings which swept the Middle East region. North Korean government labels cell phone users as war criminalsIn North Korea, using a cell phone could come with the accusation and punishment of being a war criminal. Security experts put pressure on industrial control system makersAccording to a report on Wired’s Threat Level blog, a group of security service providers have published exploits for security vulnerabilities in components used in industrial control systems that could be used to compromise or disrupt these systems. DHS disputes memo on purported railway computer breachThe Department of Homeland Security is disputing a government memo obtained by Nextgov.com that said a targeted attack on the computer network of a railway company in the Northwest disrupted train service in early December. O2 fixes phone number leak, explains muck-upO2 has fixed the issue that causes customers’ mobile numbers to be shared with websites they visit from their phones. In a post on its own site, the network admitted that between 10 January and 2pm today, customers’ phone numbers could have been accessed by sites that don’t belong to the network’s roster of ‘trusted partners’. Video conferencing systems as spying toolsDuring an investigation conducted over the course of three months, security expert HD Moore found that many video conferencing systems can be easily accessed over the internet. ‘Citadel’ Trojan Touts Trouble-Ticket SystemThe proprietors of a new ZeuS Trojan variant are marketing their malware as a social network that lets customers file bug reports, suggest and vote on new features in upcoming versions, and track trouble tickets that can be worked on by the developers and fellow users alike. Microsoft: Worm Operator Worked at Antivirus FirmIn a surprise filing made late Monday, Microsoft said a former technical expert at a Russian antivirus firm was the person responsible for operating the Kelihos botnet, a global spam machine that Microsoft dismantled in a coordinated takedown last year. Symantec tells customers to disable PCAnywhereSymantec is urging customers to disable PCAnywhere until it issues a software update to protect them against attacks that could result from the theft of the product’s source code. Trojan downloader is a problem for virus scannersThe Microsoft Malware Protection Center has found a trojan downloader that does not have any suspicious routines in its initial state and is therefore difficult for virus scanners to detect. Millions caught up in Android botnetSecurity firm Symantec has uncovered a massive botnet that may have lured millions of unwitting Android users into downloading malware infected apps from the official Google Android Market. Includes list of affected apps. Google wants ability to ‘combine’ your user dataGoogle is planning to rewrite its privacy policy to grant it explicit rights to “combine personal information” across multiple products and services, the company said this past Tuesday. Previously, it had only implicit rights to do so. No Picnik: Photo-editing site’s users blast GoogleEver since Google CEO Larry Page announced plans to put “more wood behind fewer arrows” last June, the Web giant has cleaved a few dozen services from its portfolio, everything from Google Health to Google Labs. But none of the cuts has caused as much outcry and as many allegations of Google underhandedness as the closing of its Picnik photo-editing service. Firefox to Get a ‘Reset’ ButtonMozilla is planning to add a ‘reset’ button to Firefox. The idea is to enable users to repair their Firefox install or revert to a default state, while also retaining their data, bookmarks, history and so on. Work is underway on implementing the feature, which will be accessible in several ways. Mozilla’s BrowserID moves forwardMozilla’s BrowserID project, which aims to provide a simpler, more portable decentralised login and identity management platform, has moved forward with its first deployment within the non-profit organisation. Open WebOS committed to fall 2012Hewlett-Packard kicked the first open source component to WebOS out the door this past Wednesday, along with a calendar for when its source code will be completely open. Fedora relocates operating system under /usr/The Fedora developers are currently working on implementing the plan to move all files stored in the Linux distribution’s /bin/, /sbin/, /lib/ and /lib64/ directories to equivalent sub-directories in /usr/. Google’s SPDY Incorporated Into Next-Gen HTML, Offers TCP EnhancementsGoogle’s efforts to improve Internet efficiency through the development of the SPDY (pronounced “speedy”) protocol got a major boost this past Tuesday when the chairman of the HTTP Working Group (HTTPbis), Mark Nottingham, called for it to be included in the HTTP 2.0 standard. Next Xbox to prevent you from playing used games?Will the next Xbox restrict you from playing your favorite used games? Random TinyHacker Links Super User Questions How-To Geek Weekly Article Recap Geeky Goodness from the ETC Side One Year Ago on How-To Geek How-To Geek Comics Weekly Roundup How-To Geek Weekly Trivia Roundup

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