Showing posts with label Computers and the Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Computers and the Internet. Show all posts

Mass MW3 Registrations Choking Call of Duty Elite

Activision is reportedly having a hard time taking in a flood of registrations for Call of Duty Elite, the multiplayer component for Modern Warfare 3.
ZoomActivision is reporting an overload of registration requests for the premium "Elite" multiplayer component of the just-released Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3. The surge of registrations for Call of Duty Elite has reportedly created a bottleneck, preventing many players from signing up.
That said, gamers shouldn't fear that the internet has crashed againor that Activision suspects piracy, but rather the company didn't anticipate (for some odd reason) that the game would be quite so popular so quickly. It's quite possible Activision is quietly staggering registrations much like EA will ramp up subscribers for Star Wars: The Old Republic to reduce network latency, but Activision is currently sticking to its "exceeding expectations" guns nevertheless.
"We are proud to say that Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 has launched and millions of people are already playing online," said Chacko Sonny, Studio Head, Beachhead Studio. "Registration requests for our new live service Call of Duty Elite are exceeding even our most optimistic expectations, which is creating a bottleneck and some players have not been able to register."
"We have already registered hundreds of thousands of players and we are working around the clock to increase our capacity as quickly as possible," Sonny added. "Please be assured your gameplay data is safe and that whenever you successfully register for Call of Duty Elite, all of your data will be waiting for you."
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 is now (finally) available for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Nintendo Wii, Nintendo DS and Windows PC.
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11:50 PM - November 8, 2011 by Kevin Parrish - 
source: Beachhead Studio

Apple: Sorry, No Siri for Older iPhones

Apple is touting Siri as the most important feature of the iPhone 4S, but will older iPhones ever get a chance to meet the robotic assistant?
ZoomWhen Apple announced the iPhone 4S, Siri was hailed as one of the biggest and most important features. However, if you thought she might some day make her way to the iPhone 4, or even older models of the iPhone, it looks like you're going to be disappointed. Apple has said it has no plans to bring Siri to older iterations of the phone.
Michael Steeber reports that someone he knows contacted Apple via a bug report with the suggestion that the company offer iPhone 4 and iPod touch 4th generation users the option to upgrade to a 'special' build of iOS 5 that would include Siri for a fee of $19.99. This would avoid developers illegally hacking Siri onto devices other than the iPhone 4S, Steeber's friend told Apple. However, it seems Apple is not interested in making an extra $20 from iPhone 4 users. Steebler says his contact got the following response from Apple:
Engineering has provided the following feedback regarding this issue:
Siri only works on iPhone 4S and we currently have no plans to support older devices.
Though it's a bit disappointing to hear it straight from the horse's mouth, we can't say we weren't expecting such a response. If Siri is being touted as one of the iPhone 4S's best features, it stands to reason that Apple wouldn't want her heading to other, older devices. Still, all is not lost. Siri may not be arriving on the iPhone 4 (or iPod touch) in any official capacity, but there are ways of getting her to play nice with older devices.
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12:00 PM - November 9, 2011 - By Jane McEntegart - 
Source : Michael Steeber

Zuckerberg: Google+ is Just a "Little Version of Facebook"

Jobs, game development and more in a 54-minute interview.
ZoomUnlike Amazon and Apple who are considered respected partners, Facebook founder and CEO Marl Zuckerberg recently acknowledged in an interview that Google is indeed a rival, labeling the new Google+ social network as the search engine giant's "own little version of Facebook." He made this comment while talking with Charlie Rose in an exclusive interview which aired Monday night on PBS.
"People like to talk about war," he said. "There are a lot of ways in which the companies work together. There are real competitions in there, but I don’t think this is going to be the type of situation where there’s one company that wins all the stuff. Google in some ways is more competitive. When I look at Amazon and Apple, I see companies that are extremely aligned with us. We have a lot of conversations with people at both companies trying to figure out ways in which we can do more together."
"We're focused on doing one thing incredibly well," added COO Sheryl Sandberg who also took part in the interview. "If you look at other companies, all of these companies are doing a lot of different things but we’re still, as we grow, doing exactly one thing."
As if proving Zuckerberg right in regards to his "own little version of Facebook" comment, Google announced on Monday that it added Google+ Pages to its social networking site, allowing companies and other entities to set up shop just like they do on Facebook.
"For you and me, this means we can now hang out live with the local bike shop, or discuss our wardrobe with a favorite clothing line, or follow a band on tour. Google+ pages give life to everything we find in the real world," said Vic Gundotra, Senior Vice President of Engineering. "And by adding them to circles, we can create lasting bonds with the pages (and people) that matter most."
Numerous companies and popular brands have already created pages including Macy'sAngry Birds,ToyotaPepsiGood Morning America and more. Organizations can create their Google+ Page by heading here.
As for the PBS interview, the Facebook founder/CEO, COO and Charlie Rose cover 54 minutes worth of topics spanning Zuckerberg's experience with Apple's Steve Jobs, going public with Facebook, the Chinese government’s block of the social website, and even why Facebook will never be a games developer. To watch the full interview, head here.
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0:00 AM - November 9, 2011 - By Kevin Parrish - 
Source : Charlie Rose/PBS

Feds: Cyber Criminals Hijacked 4 Million Computers

An Eastern European pack of cyber thieves known as the Rovegroup hijacked at least four million computers in over 100 countries, including at least half a million computers in the U.S., to make off with $14 million in "illegitimate income" before they were caught, federal officials announced today.
The malware allegedly used in the "massive and sophisticated scheme" also managed to infect computers in U.S. government agencies including NASA and targeted the websites for major institutions like iTunes, Netflix and the IRS -- forcing users attempting to get to those sites to different websites entirely, according to a federal indictmentunsealed in New York today.
The accused hackers, six Estonian nationals and a Russian national, rerouted the internet traffic illegally on the infected computers for the last four years in order to reap profits from internet advertisement deals, the indictment said. The FBI busted up the alleged international cyber ring after a two-year investigation called Operation Ghost Click.
"The global reach of these cyber thieves demonstrates that the criminal world is... flat," said Janice Fedarcyk, the FBI Assistant Director in charge of the New York field office. "The Internet is pervasive because it is such a useful tool, but it is a tool that can be exploited by those with bad intentions and a little know-how."
Though they operated out of their home countries, the alleged hackers used entities in the U.S. and all over the world -- including Estonia-based software company Rove Digital from which the group apparently gets its name -- to carry out the plot.
According to the indictment, the suspects entered into deals with various internet advertisers in which they would be paid for generating traffic to certain websites or advertisements. But instead of earning the money legitimately, the FBI said the defendants used malware to force infected computers to unwillingly visit the target sites or advertisements -- pumping up click results and, therefore, ill-gotten profits to the tune of $14 million.
The malware was also designed to prevent users from installing anti-virus software that may have been able to free the infected computers.
The six Estonian nationals have been arrested on cyber crime charges while the Russian national remains at large.
"Today, with the flip of a switch, the FBI and our partners dismantled the Rove criminal enterprise," Fedarcyk said. "Thanks to the collective effort across the U.S. and in Estonia, six leaders of the criminal enterprise have been arrested and numerous servers operated by the criminal organization have been disabled."

How the Fraud Worked, According to the FBI

The indictment describes several examples of alleged cyber fraud including two principle strategies: traffic redirection and ad replacement.
In the first case, if a user searched for the websites of major institutions like iTunes, Netflix or the IRS, the search results would return normally. However, if the user tried to click on the link to the websites, the malware on the computer would force a redirect to a different website where the criminals would profit in their advertisement deal.
In the second, when an infected computer visited a major website -- like Amazon.com -- the malware would be able to simply replace regular advertisements on that page with advertisements of their own making.
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By RICHARD ESPOSITO and LEE FERRAN | ABC News

Formulaic ‘Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3′ still a critical hit

Another year, another Call of Duty. In what's become an annual whirlwind of marketing blitzes, midnight launches and millions of sudden sick days, a new entry in Activision's best-selling shooter franchise has arrived.
This time it's Modern Warfare 3, the follow-up to the critically-acclaimed Modern Warfare 2, which set all sorts of sales records when it was released in 2009. Most of those were broken last year by Call of Duty: Black Ops, and it's a pretty safe bet that Modern Warfare 3 will in turn shatter those.
Really only a handful of events could stop that from happening. A rival game could steal away sales (Battlefield 3 is great, but not that great), technical glitches could mar its launch (so far, so good), or, you know, the game could just outright stink.
According to critics, that's not the case, either.
Averaging a healthy 90 at Metacritic, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 delivers another sumptuous, globetrotting rollercoaster ride while polishing its legendary multiplayer to a high sheen. Just don't expect it to reinvent the machine gun.
"Modern Warfare 3 is a shining example of refinement and improvement," gushes The Telegraph in a perfect 5/5 review. "It's familiar, sure, but here familiarity doesn't breed contempt, just respect and reward for those who've dedicated so much time to the series."
To many, however, that familiarity is a bit of a double-edged sword. The game boasts a tight single-player campaign that picks up right where Modern Warfare 2 left off, hurtling players to hotspots around the world as they try to stop a terrorist organization from doing lousy things to good people. Massive, exploding set-pieces, fiercely linear missions — yeah, it's pretty much what you did in the last game, too.
"Modern Warfare 3 doesn't stray from the oft-emulated Call of Duty 4 formula," points out Game Informer. "This large-scale, linear, global, and sometimes controversial campaign can be finished in less than six hours." They go on to note that while the core gameplay has remained "fundamentally unchanged," it still "serves as a great example of how many subtle tweaks can add up to an improved overall product." The score? A 9/10.
That's the same score awarded by IGN, who marvel at its scope while bemoaning the game's single-player déjà vu.
"While Call of Duty games have become formulaic at this point, as evidenced by Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3's muddled narrative and at times frustrating design, Infinity Ward and Sledgehammer Games have refined and polished the Modern Warfare experience to produce the best of the series with the third installment."
Of course, most players are going to jump right past the solo play and hop directly into Modern Warfare 3's multiplayer warzones. And if indeed that's your plan, you're in for a treat. Boasting a new point system (killstreaks have been replaced with the much friendlier "pointstreaks") that rewards different play styles, it's packed to the gills with new modes and refined features -- though again, it's not exactly new.
"Rather than risk a reinvention — or even a major evolution — of the most popular competitive gaming of the current generation, Modern Warfare 3 wisely stays with what's working, then adds and adds and adds," says Games Radar, which doles out another 9/10.
The folks at Giant Bomb, however, are a little fed up with the subtle tweaks.
"The whole thing feels old at this point," says reviewer Jeff Gerstmann. "The new tricks feel more like a distraction designed to make you forget how revolutionary Call of Duty 4 was… It makes you wonder if the franchise's best days are truly behind it." An 8/10 is the call, though he also considers it "still one of the best first-person shooters of the year."
So should you get it? With pre-orders through the roof (Amazon claims that Modern Warfare 3 is their best-selling video game pre-order of all time), you probably already did. Fence sitters, however, should feel safe to hop off and hop in. It might not change the battlefield, but it looks destined to win the war.
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Google announces Chrome OS hardware and first pilot program

By Tim Conneally | Published December 7, 2010, 3:36 PM


One year ago, Google gave the world its first look at Chrome OS, a project taking a new approach to thin clients and terminal computing. The long and the short of Chrome OS is: if the browser is the most-used application on a PC, why would you load it down with anything else?
Chrome OS focuses on computers that are permanently connected, where all apps, data, and user identities and desktops are stored in the cloud. The computers running the OS are designed to be as unencumbered by software as possible, so they can run quickly and reliably. Businesses can run them in secure private clouds just as well as consumers can run them on the public Web.
The project has come to the point where it can start to be tested in the real world, and Google today announced some crucial details about who will be making Chrome notebook computers, when the public can expect them, and how they'll ultimately work.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested in UK

By RAPHAEL SATTER, Associated Press  19 mins ago
http://www.ap.org/



LONDON – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange surrendered to London police on Tuesday as part of a Swedish sex-crimes investigation, the latest blow to an organization that faces legal, financial and technological challenges after releasing hundreds of secret U.S. diplomatic cables.
Assange was due at Westminster Magistrate's Court later Tuesday. If he challenges his extradition to Sweden, he will likely be remanded into custody or released on bail until another judge rules on whether to extradite him, a spokeswoman for the extradition department said on customary condition of anonymity.
Since beginning to release the cables last week, WikiLeaks has seen its bank accounts canceled, its web sites attacked and the U.S. government launch a criminal investigation, saying the group has jeopardized national security and diplomatic efforts around the world. It has also seen supporters come to its aid by setting up over 500 mirror sites around the world.
The legal troubles for Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, stem from allegations leveled against him by two women he met while in Sweden over the summer. Assange is accused of rape and sexual molestation in one case and of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion in another.

Avast Software Tracks, Shuts Down Pirates

Neil J. Rubenking - PC Magazine  Mon Dec 6, 9:09 am ET
http://www.pcmag.com/



Prague-based Avast Software makes very good antivirus protectionavailable for free. Why, then, would anybody pirate a license for their paid Pro edition? Well, there are a couple features only found in the Pro edition and in Avast Internet Security 5.0.
Pro users get Script Shield protection against Web-based script viruses as well as added protection from the product's "virtualization sandbox." Apparently those bonus features were enough to tempt the pirates. Or perhaps they just couldn't resist the challenge in the product's name.
Avast's researchers noticed right away when 14 user licenses, issued in 2009, showed up connecting for signature updates from many more than 14 locations. They decided to wait and see just how far it spread. "We made a decision to see just how 'viral' this one license for Avast Pro Antivirus could be," said Vince Steckler, Avast chief executive. "Now we are in the process of converting these pirates over to legal products."
Using geolocation of the IP addresses from which the pirated installations connected, Avast tracked the pirates to over 200 countries. Steckler joked, "The list contains about every country you have heard of, and some you haven't." Russia, Mexico, Brazil, Italy, and Spain topped the list for biggest numbers of pirates, followed by the U.S. Perhaps most surprising were the two licenses connecting from Vatican City.

Visited porn? Web browser flaw secretly bares all

By JORDAN ROBERTSON, AP Technology Writer  Sun Dec 5, 3:16 pm ET
http://ap.org/



SAN FRANCISCO – Dozens of websites have been secretly harvesting lists of places that their users previously visited online, everything from news articles to bank sites to pornography, a team of computerscientists found.
The information is valuable for con artists to learn more about their targets and send them personalized attacks. It also allows e-commerce companies to adjust ads or prices — for instance, if the site knows you've just come from a competitor that is offering a lower price.
Although passwords aren't at risk, in harvesting a detailed list of where you've been online, sites can create thorough profiles on its users.
The technique the University of California, San Diego researchers investigated is called "history sniffing" and is a result of the way browsers interact with websites and record where they've been. A few lines of programming code are all a site needs to pull it off.
Although security experts have known for nearly a decade that such snooping is possible, the latest findings offer some of the first public evidence of sites exploiting the problem. Current versions of the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers still allow this, as do older versions of Chrome and Safari, the researchers said.

Facebook founder rolls out changes to profile pages

AFP - Monday, December 6
http://www.afp.com/



WASHINGTON (AFP) - – Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg unveiled changes to member profile pages on Sunday and said the movie "The Social Network" got "hugely basic" things wrong about the origins of the site.
Zuckerberg, in an interview with the CBS show "60 Minutes, said he turned down an opportunity to sell Facebook to Yahoo! for one billion dollars four years ago and made it clear he is in no hurry to take the company public.
The 26-year-old Facebook chief executive also defended his approach to the privacy of the social network's more than 500 million users, saying "we never sell your information."
"Advertisers who are using the site never get access to your information," he said. "It's against all of our policies for an application to ever share information with advertisers.
"Now, do we get it right all the time? No!" he said. "But it's something that we take really seriously."

Cloak your connection to foil Firesheep snoopers

Top Story - windowssecrets.com, 
November 4, 2010
By Woody Leonhard 


In his Oct. 28 In the Wild column, Robert Vamosi showed how easy it is to snoop a Wi-Fi connection using a clever Firefox add-in called Firesheep.

If you're serious about protecting your surfing from prying eyes while on an unencrypted public Wi-Fi connection, the onus is on you to lock down your connections. Using virtual private networking (VPN) is one of the best ways I know to do that.

Firesheep has raised the awareness — and hackles — of Wi-Fi users all over the world. It exploits an old, well-known problem called sidejacking. Eric Butler, the author of Firesheep, describes the situation succinctly in his Firesheep post:

"When logging into a Web site you usually start by submitting your username and password. The server then checks to see if an account matching this information exists and if so, replies back to you with a 'cookie,' which is used by your browser for all subsequent requests."

Most Web sites protect your username and password with a secure HTTPS connection. Unfortunately, many immediately drop back into insecure HTTP once a visitor is signed in — and the site sends its cookie back over a now-insecure connection. Anybody snooping on your conversation can make a copy of the cookie and use it to interact with the Web site in precisely the same way you do. This is a process known as sidejacking.

Firesheep makes it point-and-click easy to monitor Wi-Fi signals and look for cookies shouted out in the clear. It specifically sidejacks interactions with popular sites such as Amazon, CNET, Facebook, Flickr, Windows Live (including Hotmail), Twitter, WordPress, Yahoo, and others.


Your next PC: thinking beyond the desktop

Top Story - windowssecrets.com
December 2, 2010
By Woody Leonhard 


With Black Friday a fading memory and Cyber Monday deals still fresh on the Web, visions of a new PC may be dancing in your head.

But before you go out hunting for that shiny new Win7 machine, take a deep breath, sit back, and consider these tips on buying a PC.

The first and most important tip? Ask yourself whether you need another Windows-based desktop — there are some excellent alternatives. In fact, for home computing, Windows is becoming less and less relevant. More of the services and applications we use are on the Web than in our PCs. And there are now many ways to work on the Web that are cheaper, easier, or just more fun than sitting at a desk and staring into a PC screen.


WikiLeaks Switched, Banned From Amazon

9:50 PM - December 2, 2010
By Rico Mossesgeld 
Source : Tom's Guide US


Last November 30, Wikileaks announced through Twitter that it was experiencing a massive distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack amounting to 10 Gigabits a second. DDOS attacks attempt to overwhelm network servers, with the goal of making the websites they support unavailable to web surfers.
Wikileaks is a whistleblower site that has once again made headlines for its leak of over a quarter million of sensitive American diplomatic cables. The website, ostensibly to protect itself from the DDOS, started transferring its operations from Swedish host PRQ to Amazon’s servers as early as last Sunday, November 28. While well-known for its online retail store, Amazon also leases out its own dedicated servers to other companies, under the Amazon Web Services (AWS) brand.