Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Facebook Hit By Clickjacking Attack

Facebook is cleaning up after a clickjacking attack that infiltrated the social networking site this week -- and security experts say this won't be the last such attack.

Clickjacking, in which an attacker slips a malicious link or malware onto a legitimate Web page that appears to contain normal content, is an emerging threat experts have been warning about. The attack on Facebook was in the form of a comment on a user's account with a photo that lured the victim to click on it. The embedded link took the victim to a Web page that presented like a CAPTCHA or Turing test, and asked the user to click on a blue "Share" button on the Facebook page.

Once clicked, the victim is redirected to a YouTube video, and then the same post shows up on the victim's account and thus tries to infect his or her friends. Security experts say the attack appeared to be more of a prank or trial balloon, and it affects only Firefox and Chrome browsers, according to security expert Krzysztof Kotowicz, who blogged about the attack this week.

Facebook has now blocked the URL to the malicious site, fb.59.to. "This problem isn't specific to Facebook, but we're always working to improve our systems and are building additional protections against this type of behavior. We've blocked the URL associated with this site, and we're cleaning up the relatively few cases where it was posted -- something email providers, for example, can't do," a Facebook spokesperson says.

Robert "RSnake" Hansen, CEO of SecTheory -- who, along with Jeremiah Grossman, CTO of WhiteHat Security, warned the industry about the threat of clickjacking more than a year ago -- says Facebook and most other sites don't employ much anti-clickjacking protection.

"This could be the beginning of a new wave of anti-Facebook clickjacking worms," Hansen says. "This same concept has already hit Twitter several times. It generally takes a few attacks for companies like this to wake up and realize the problem doesn't magically go away just by blocking one link."

But Facebook's spokesperson says the social networking site is also "working against these attacks on a number of fronts," including deframing scripts and X-Frame options. Hansen recommends employing both of these methods to combat clickjacking.

The clickjacking concept is really nothing new, but Hansen and Grossman last year discovered a brand of clickjacking that spans browser families and doesn't even require a user to click on anything. Just loading a compromised page sets off the attack, and clicking on that page will likely make things worse for the victim, they say. Clickjacking is both a Web and a browser problem, but the fixes likely need to come from the browser vendors. But a fix goes to the way browsers work, which means there's no simple fix.

"Clickjacking is such an easy attack and one that is completely unaddressed. We'll see much more of this, especially across the social networks," WhiteHat's Grossman says.

Kotowicz blogged that the clickjacking attack contains malicious iFrames, and that the reason the attack didn't affect Internet Explorer and Opera is due to an incorrect HTML in one of the pages.

Meanwhile, Facebook is reminding users to be wary of any posts, messages, or links on Facebook or anywhere else that appear suspicious, the Facebook spokesperson says.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Microsoft permanently barred from selling Word


Microsoft has been ordered by a US District Court to halt sales of its popular word processing application, Word. Judge Leonard Davis has ruled that the software-giant is guilty of patent infringement and has prohibited it from selling, importing, testing, demonstrating or marketing any Microsoft Word products able to open XML, DOCX, or DOCM files (XML) files containing custom XML.

Plaintiff i4i sued Microsoft in March 2007 claiming that it violated a 1998 software patent (number 5,787,449) for a document system that eliminated the need for manually embedded formatting codes. One of the fundamental features of the markup language XML is that it is readable by both people and machines. XML allows developers and users to define their own tags for data - unlike other markup languages like HTML which have predefined tags.

Microsoft has already paid $200 million after a federal jury ruled that the XML properties of Word 2003 and Word 2007 infringed on i4i's patent. Redmond accumulated another $77 million in fees after the most recent ruling, $40 million for willful patent infringement and $37 million in prejudgment interest. The company must comply within 60 days and is planning to appeal the verdict.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Microsoft sued over 'Bing' name

San Francisco - Lawyers for a small US technology firm said on Thursday it is suing Microsoft on the grounds its has prior claim to the name "Bing".

Bing! Information Design (BID) filed suit in a circuit court in the state of Missouri accusing Microsoft of trademark infringement, unfair competition, and "tortious interference with business expectancy".

"For nearly ten years my client has been using the Bing! mark," attorney Anthony Simon said in a release.

"Microsoft's use of the identical mark and its aggressive advertising have gutted all of my client's efforts to distinguish its business and created confusion that must be remedied."
Microsoft told AFP on Thursday that it had yet to see a copy of the lawsuit but that the argument is specious.

"We have not been served with a complaint, but are aware of the suit based on media reports," Microsoft spokesperson Kevin Kutz said in an e-mail response to an AFP inquiry.

'Without merit'

"We believe this suit to be without merit and we do not believe there is any confusion in the marketplace with regard to the complainant's offerings and Microsoft's Bing."

He added that Microsoft is looking forward to defending its position in court.

BID creates interactive illustrations, designs, graphics, animations, and technical diagrams, according to Simon.

A BID website on Thursday featured sports stories and quizzes localised for St Louis, the city where the company is based.

Microsoft rolled out its new Bing search engine worldwide in June in a challenge to internet powerhouse Google.

Microsoft entered into a 10-year web search and advertising partnership with Yahoo! in July that set the stage for a joint offensive against Google.

Microsoft has also begun integrating messages from hot micro-blogging service Twitter into Bing and plans to do the same with status updates from Facebook.

uTorrent Adds Video Streaming Support

uTorrent the client of choice for most western BitTorrent users ? has added the option to stream video files while downloading. With this new functionality, BitTorrent Inc. hopes to provide the ?point-click-watch? experience people have grown used to from their usage of streaming sites such as YouTube.

utorrentBitTorrent was first released by Bram Cohen back in 2001, long before streaming video sites such as YouTube existed. At the time, those who wanted to watch high quality video on their computers sometimes had to wait for hours or days until a download finished.

Now, at the end of the decade where BitTorrent has become a synonym for file-sharing, hundreds of millions of people have high speed broadband connections at their homes. Downloading a popular movie or TV-series often takes less than an hour nowadays, but for the demanding web users of today this delay can still prove quite annoying.

Spoiled by the many streaming video sites that have surged in popularity since YouTube?s launch in 2005, many people simply want to start watching instantly. To satiate this demand the popular BitTorrent client uTorrent has now added streaming support to the latest uTorrent beta release, which allows users to play video files while they are downloading.

?Our hope is to transform getting media using uTorrent from a ?load-wait-watch-tomorrow? to more of a ?point-click-watch? experience,? Simon Morris, BitTorrent?s VP of Product Management said in a comment.
uTorrent?s new streaming option

utorrent

Although several other BitTorrent clients have already implemented similar streaming capabilities, uTorrent will finally make BitTorrent streaming possible for the majority of BitTorrent users.

In our tests the new feature worked flawlessly on well-seeded torrents. Users simply have to click on the play button next to the download, and after a few seconds or minutes it will turn green, ready to be streamed.

By default the latest uTorrent release is configured to use the DivX web player to stream video. This works well for most files but for us it caused problems with some video formats. Changing it to VLC or any other media player is relatively easy though, by nominating a different streaming player in uTorrent?s preferences.

Aside from streaming regular downloads, uTorrent?s parent company BitTorrent Inc. is also working on BitTorrent-powered live streams. BitTorrent inventor Bram Cohen himself aims to develop a piece of code that is superior to all the other P2P-based streaming solutions on the market today.

?I think there?s a very large market for live [streaming] in general, and to date no-one has proven that a p2p solution can meet the real-world requirements for being an acceptable live solution. I intend on changing that,? Bram told TorrentFreak earlier this year.

For now, uTorrent users will have to settle for on-demand streaming. Those who do not intend to use the feature can be assured that the streaming implementation used by uTorrent is designed on the principles of tit-for tat sharing, meaning that it does not slow down regular downloads.

3D Blu-ray standard finalized

The Blu-ray Disc Association has recently released its finalized 3D specifications, which includes full 1080p resolution, backward compatibility for both 3D Blu-ray players and the 3D Blu-ray Discs (meaning that both will play or be able to be played in 2D), and the use of a new MVC codec, an extension of the existing AVC.

According to the Blu-ray Disc Association, 3D playback will be "display agnostic"; the format will be compatible across "any compatible 3D display", which basically means a new TV set for this technology work.

The PS3 is also included in the specification announcement from the Blu-ray Disc Association, which means the PS3 is perfectly suited to become a 3D platform in every respect.

The capability for PS3 consoles to become full-fledged 3D Blu-ray players, especially in advance of what seems to be the biggest 3D Blu-ray killer app yet seen, could be a huge selling point for PlayStation in 2010.

Performance problems delay Visual Studio 2010 release

San Francisco : Beset by performance issues, Microsoft has decided to extend the beta testing period for its upcoming Visual Studio 2010 software development platform and will postpone the planned March 22, 2010, launch date by a few weeks, a Microsoft executive said in a blog on Thursday.

Visual Studio 2010 beta 2 and the accompanying .Net Framework 4 programming platform shipped in October.

The reason for the delay: performance issues identified by beta testers, said S. Somasegar, senior vice president of the Microsoft developer division, in a blog entry: "You have ... given us feedback around performance issues, specifically in a few key scenarios including virtual memory usage. As you may have seen, we significantly improved performance between beta 1 and beta 2. Based on what we've heard, we clearly needed to do more work. Over the last couple of months, our engineering team has been doing a push to improve performance."

As a result, Microsoft has extended the beta period to include an additional interim checkpoint release, a release candidate that will be publicly available around the February 2010, Somasegar said. "The [Visual Studio] team will need some time to react to that feedback before creating the final release build. We are therefore moving the launch of Visual Studio 2010 and .Net Framework 4 back a few weeks," he said.

Visual Studio 2010 is set to serve as a lynchpin for developing Microsoft SharePoint-based collaborative applications. It also has boasted a slimmed-down SDK and interoperability between Visual Basic, C#, and dynamic languages. Other capabilities include historical debugging, Silverlight rich Internet application development and Windows Presentation Foundation capabilities for the IDE.

The 2010 version of Visual Studio also is positioned as a platform to use for developing for Windows 7 and the Windows Azure cloud platform. It also supports software processes with Microsoft's Team Foundation Server application lifecycle management server. Multi-monitor support also has been touted for Visual Studio 2010. .Net Framework 4 was to feature SharePoint capabilities and a reduction in size.

Mozilla: Firefox Mobile will kill off app stores

Mozilla claims that its new Firefox Mobile browser could be the beginning of the end for the hugely popular app stores created by Apple and its ilk.

Mozilla is releasing the first version of Firefox Mobile (codenamed Fennec) on Nokia's N900 handset, with versions for Windows Mobile and Android set to arrive next year.

The foundation claims that Firefox Mobile will have the fastest Javascript engine of any mobile browser, allowing developers to create apps for the browser instead of creating multiple versions of the same app for different mobile OSes.

"Anyone who knows JavaScript and HTML can develop a great app without having to learn a specific mobile platform," Jay Sullivan, vice president of mobile at Mozilla told PC Pro.

Sullivan claims developers are frustrated by the difficulties of writing for multiple mobile platforms. "We look at the problems it creates for small innovators," he said. "You have to create an iPhone app, an Android app, a Windows Mobile app..."

"As developers get more frustrated with quality assurance, the amount of handsets they have to buy, whether their security updates will get past the iPhone approval process... I think they'll move to the web."

Sullivan says it will take time to wean developers away from the app store model, which has been heralded as one of the chief reasons for the iPhone's success. "In the interim period, apps will be very successful. Over time, the web will win because it always does."

Desktop features

Many of the features users have grown used to on Firefox's PC browser will be available in the mobile version. The Awesome Bar - which uses bookmarks and browsing history to auto-complete web addresses as users begin to type a website's URL or name - will appear in Firefox Mobile.

The mobile browser will be continually synchronised with the PC. "When you start typing [into the mobile browser], the website you went to on the desktop a week ago will just pop up," Sullivan said.

The synchronisation will extend beyond the Awesome Bar. "We will sync browser tabs in real time," Sullivan adds. "If you have five, 10, 20 tabs open on your PC and something happens and you have to leave, you can pick up where you left off on your phone."

Firefox Mobile will also support browser add-ons. "Some are existing add-ons for the PC, some are brand new," Sullivan claims.

Sullivan admits that features such as multiple tab support and add-ons will require Mozilla to carefully manage the browser's memory, so that it doesn't consume too much of the phone's limited resources. "We have to flush the memory more often [than on the desktop browser]," Sullivan said. "The goal is to create the feeling that we do for the desktop user."

Microsoft gives sniffing technology to ISPs

Software giant Microsoft has given ISPs new tools to battle child pornography. The software, dubbed PhotoDNA, which Redmond has given the US National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), uses unique "signatures" of pornography to find images of minors being sexually abused.

NCMEC chief executive Ernie Allen said on Wednesday in a conference call with reporters that the software will have an extraordinary impact. At the moment it is possible for images of children to stay in circulation long after the child molesters have been jailed.

Microsoft researchers worked with Dartmouth College computer science professor Hany Farid to create PhotoDNA software that pinpoints identifying characteristics in digital images that computers can scan for online.

Unlike current digital image-identification software, PhotoDNA reliably identifies pictures even if size, colouring or other characteristics have been altered. The NCMEC is going to create a list of signatures of "the worst of the worst" child pornography images. It will then release the software to ISPs who can use it to find which pictures are being sent around its network.

PhotoDNA is being incorporated into Microsoft's Bing search engine so it is expected that Redmond will start finding some of the pictures itself.

Swedish Police Arrest 12,000 Song File-Sharer

Acting on a music industry tipoff, Swedish police conducted a raid yesterday which led to the arrest of a man on suspicion of copyright infringement. The 25 year-old is said to have made 12,000 tracks available on the Internet. After questioning the man admitted the charge and was later released.

While BitTorrent is far and away the most popular file-sharing protocol in use today, it is relatively rare that its users attract the attention of the police.

The reasons for this are fairly straightforward. When the police get involved with file-sharers they are usually interested in very large-scale cases of copyright infringement. While BitTorrent users may indeed be sharing many items at once, it?s not simply a case of browsing that user?s shared folder to see what else is on offer ? BitTorrent has no shared folder-type setup.

Direct Connect, however, does have such a setup and its users are likely to share their whole music collections at once in an easily identifiable way. Although Direct Connect hubs are more difficult to access than a regular torrent site, once in, investigators find gathering evidence trivial if the sharers make no effort to mask their identities.

While details are scarce at the moment and the use of Direct Connect has not yet been confirmed, it appears that another large-scale file-sharer has fallen foul of the law.

Acting on a tipoff, Swedish police carried out a raid in the Uppvidinge Municipality yesterday.

After a search on the home of a 25 year-old man, he was arrested on suspicion of copyright infringement and his computer was seized.

According to the police, during questioning the man later admitted to sharing 12,000 songs on the Internet, although they probably mean ?making available? ? a subtle but important difference. He was later released.

Police said the investigation was led by the prosecutors office in Stockholm, who were acting on a tip from what they describe as a ?music interests organization.? Although unconfirmed at the moment, this type of tip and raid bears all the hallmarks of IFPI.

Just over a week ago, IFPI submitted a request to the Stockholm District Court to force an ISP to hand over the personal details of another alleged large-scale file-sharer, confirmed to have used Direct Connect. The action marked the first time a request had been made by the organization under the IPRED legislation introduced in April.

It is unclear why yesterday?s arrest of an alleged 12,000 track file-sharer means that his case will be dealt with in a criminal court, yet the other detailed above involving a 10,000 track sharer is destined for IFPI civil action.

At the time of writing, TorrentFreak?s requests for more information from the Stockholm police remain unanswered.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Core i7 930 comes in Q1 2010

Core i7 920 will get replaced by the Core i7 930 and the one with the bigger number will be slightly faster.


We have mentioned this CPU here and let?s repeat the basics again. The Core i7 930 runs at 2.8GHz, is based on a quad-core Nehalem 45nm core and fits the socket LGA1366. Its QPI speed is 4.8GT/sec and it comes with 8MB of cache.

It's turbo engine can automatically overclock it to rather modest 3.06GHz and the CPU supports DDR3 800 or 1066, at least officially. It does support triple channel memory in case that anyone cares about that anymore.

The launch time is middle of Q1 2010 and we assume that it should be selling for $284 as this is the current price of Core i7 920, the one that 930 is supposed to replace.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Samsung unveils water, shock and magnet-proof memory cards


Samsung has unveiled its new, virtually indestructible memory cards. The CF Plus and SD Plus are built to withstand the elements, boasting a design that is water, shock and magnet-proof. Samsung claims its memory cards can bathe in the sea unharmed for over 24 hours, shrug off the weight of a 1.6-ton vehicle, and resist over 13 times the magnetic force of home theater speakers.



The near-imperishable memory can retain data without a refresh for up to 10 years, and the bundled data recovery software is said to be three times faster than conventional methods. The cards are made in a brushed metallic or beige epoxy casing as well as microSD, SD and Compact Flash formats. The microSD and SD cards can read at 17MB/s and come in 4, 8 and 16GB densities, while the CF cards can attain 45MB/s read speeds and only ship in 4 or 8GB.

Samsung's new memory cards are currently available in France, Germany, and UK, with other select countries likely to follow later.

Mozilla to open - gasp! - Firefox add-on store

Add-on-Con Mozilla has said it will "probably" open a marketplace for Firefox add-ons sometime next year.

Add-ons product manager Justin Scott (reluctantly) announced the news this morning at an add-on-happy conference in Mozilla's home town of Mountain View, California. "We'll probably be doing a marketplace pilot in 2010," he said.

Scott did not provide details. But earlier in the morning, he did say that Mozilla has no intention of using DRM - not that you would have expected anything else. "I don't know what we'll do, but we won't do DRM," he said.

Clearly, an add-on marketplace is a touchy subject for Mozilla, an open source outfit viewed as one of the leading champions of free software. Earlier in a panel discussion meant to answer the question "Do add-ons need a marketplace?," Scott hemmed and hawed over the idea.

"I really wish we had more consumer feedback on these sorts of things," he said. "We don't get enough feedback from consumers who would actually be buying these add-ons. We haven't really brought it up for discussion among them yet. But from what we hear, developers all want a store. But we're not really sure how consumers feel about it.

"Occasionally, we do see people commenting on add-ons say 'I think software should be free.'"

Yes, Mozilla already offers a central download page for Firefox add-ons - addon.mozilla.org, affectionately known as AMO - but this is not a place where developers can actually sell their browserware. The best they can do is request contributions from users, and at least one developer at today's Add-on-Con reacted with incredulity to the waffling by Scott and various other add-on makers attempting to address the marketplace issue.

"Look at the Apple App Store," the developer told the panel, referring to the application storefront the Jobsian cult has set up for the iPhone. "You guys are really smart guys. If you can't see a great path like that, I think it's a real bummer for developers."

But thanks to some additional prompting from conference host Robert Reich - founder of the real-time search outfit OneRiot - Scott did admit that some sort of Mozilla marketplace is on the way. Though that's all he said.

At one point, Reich also asked Scott if Mozilla might provide built-in access to an add-on marketplace run by a third-party - i.e., add it to the Firefox toolbar, where Mozilla already links users directly to Google and other search engines. Scott pretty much ruled out that possibility. But he did acknowledge that anyone could add an add-on store to Firefox - with an add-on.

Intel to preview new chips on December 17

On December 17, Intel will preview new processors for laptops, among other chip technologies.

The preview is significant because it will be Intel's first chance to show off its ready-to-ship, commercially viable next-generation 32-nanometer technology. Almost all Intel processors are currently built on a 45-nanometer process. Generally, the smaller the geometry, the faster and more power efficient the processor is.

Intel's Core i series of processors will be the focus of the San Francisco event that will serve as a venue to preview products to be rolled out at the Consumer Electronics Show in January. The "Nehalem" microarchitecture that powers the Core i chips was introduced in November of last year and is considered a major step up in performance over previous architectures. To date, Intel has shipped the high-end Core i7 for gaming machines and mid-range Core i5 processors.

Intel is expected to preview the first Core i3 processors--some, including the 2.93GHz i3 530, have appeared on retail sites already--as well as updates to the Core i5 series.

One of the most anticipated processor technologies is "Arrandale." This will be the first mainstream Intel laptop processor to put two processor cores and a graphics function together in one chip package, resulting in better overall power efficiency. And the new built-in graphics technology is expected to offer materially better graphics performance than current Intel graphics.

Arrandale will eventually come under the Core i3, Core i5, and Core i7 brands, though an initial version is expected to appear as the Core i3.

Intel is also expected to make a push to get its Turbo Boost technology into more Core i5 and i7 processors. Turbo Boost speeds up and slows down individual cores to meet processing and power-efficiency needs, respectively.

Separately, Intel is also getting ready to roll out new Atom chip technology for Netbooks, commonly referred to as "Pine Trail." That is also happening later this month.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

2010 Facebook Revenue Said To Be $710 Million

And you thought that web 2.0 would never bring in a dime. According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook will earn around 710 million USD in 2010.

That is likely enough to cover the endless capital expenditures that the company is forced to deal with, and push the social networking into enough profitability to finally approcah an IPO in a direct fashion.

Surely Facebook could juice a few stacks of ten million apiece in profit, finally legitimizing the business in the eyes of not justWall Street, but big business en masse.

As we reported, Facebook has just ran past 350 million users, or some 5% of the global population. With growth, users, and revenue like this, who can stop the juggernaut?

This is of course makes the difference between Facebook and Twitter even more palatable. Twitter, valued at some one billion, makes nearly nil revenues. Facebook, is on the other hand is valued at billions, but with hundreds of millions inrevenue. I know where I would invest.

Record Labels Face $60 Billion Damages for Pirating Artists

While the major record labels were dragging file-sharers and BitTorrent sites to court for copyright infringement, they were themselves being sued by a conglomerate of artists for exactly the same offenses. Warner, Sony BMG, EMI and Universal face up to $60 billion in damages for pirating a massive 300,000 tracks.

It is no secret that the major record labels have a double standard when it comes to copyright. On the one hand they try to put operators of BitTorrent sites in jail and ruin the lives of single mothers and students by demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines, and on the other they sell CDs containing music for which they haven?t obtained copyright permission.

In the past we?ve covered many disputes between artists and labels, where the latter is being accused or even sued for using songs without permission. Just a few months ago Latin America?s biggest artist, Alejandro Fern?ndez, sent the police to a Sony Music office to confiscate over 6,000 CDs that the label refused to return, and this is just the tip of the iceberg.

The labels have made a habit of using songs from a wide variety of artists for compilation CDs without securing the rights. They simply use the recording and make note of it on ?pending list? so they can deal with it later. This has been going on since the 1980s and since then the list of unpaid tracks (or copyright infringements) has grown to 300,000.

Growing tired of the label?s piracy, a group of artists have filed a class-action lawsuit in Canada against four major labels connected to the CRIA, the local equivalent of the RIAA. In October last year Warner Music, Sony BMG Music, EMI Music and Universal Music were sued for illegal use of thousands of tracks and at present the case is still underway.

How and why this blatant copyright infringement could go on for years is a mystery, but the label?s double standard has been picked up by the plaintiffs as well. ?The conduct of the defendant record companies is aggravated by their strict and unremitting approach to the enforcement of their copyright interests against consumers,? theartists argue in their claim for damages.

The suit is still ongoing but already the labels have admitted to owing at least $50 million for infringing the rights of artists, and this figure could grow as high as 60 billion. So who are the real pirates here?

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Google announces Public DNS

Google has launched Google Public DNS as an alternative domain name service for any Internet user. Designed to replace the DNS services provided by ISPs or companies, Google says that its DNS will be faster and more secure than many other DNSs, and won't filter content.
According to the company's introductory information, "Google Public DNS [can] serve many DNS requests in the round trip time it takes a packet to travel to our servers and back... Google Public DNS makes it more difficult for attackers to spoof valid responses by randomizing the case of query names and including additional data in its DNS messages...Google Public DNS complies with the DNS standards and gives the user the exact response his or her computer expects without performing any blocking, filtering, or redirection that may hamper a user's browsing experience."

Users who want to try out the service and are comfortable with reconfiguring their network settings should use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 as DNS addresses, the company said.

Microsoft starts antipiracy initiatives in 70 countries

Microsoft has simultaneously launched education initiatives in more than 70 countries to help protect consumers and increase awareness of the risks of counterfeit software. Named Microsoft Consumer Action Day, the push includes an intellectual property rights education program in schools across China, an originals club for software resellers in Germany, a risk-of-counterfeit training course for the consumer protection authority in Mexico, a children's online safety program in Greece, and a study of piracy's impact on small and midsize businesses in Argentina. Details about these efforts are available atMicrosoft.com/HowToTell and (800) RU-LEGIT (785-3448).

In addition to the education initiatives, Microsoft has also improved its engineering and enforcement efforts. On the engineering front, Microsoft has improved the product activation and validation process with Windows Activation Technologies (WAT) in Windows 7.

When it comes to enforcement, Microsoft has invested in nine Product Identification (PID) Analysis Labs around the world where forensic experts use sophisticated tools (such as digital disc fingerprinting and optical manufacturing tracking) to examine counterfeit software. They then provide critical information to local law enforcement agencies, which in turn pursue criminal software counterfeiting syndicates; so far the PID Analysis Labs has led to over 1,000 customs border patrol seizures of counterfeit software in just over two years.Microsoft is also assisting government agencies and law enforcement in more than 300 civil cases.

Most of the enforcement cases Microsoft announced today are a direct result of tips and reports from consumers. In fact, the company has received more than 150,000 voluntary reports in the past two years (more than double the amount of previous records). The software giant says this increase "reflects growing concern for the harm caused by counterfeit software andMicrosoft's efforts to give people a voice in the fight against software counterfeiting."

Consumers who are duped by fraudulent software encounter malware (not the majority, but still a significant percentage), lose personal information, risk having their identities stolen, and also waste their time and money. Moreover, most people simply find themselves without the software they thought they were paying for, and are unable to get a refund, so they have to purchase the product again. Just yesterday, we reported that Chinese pirates have started selling Windows 7 on USB disk drives withMicrosoft CEO Steve Ballmer's signature.

Intel's New Concept CPU: 48 Cores On A Single Chip

A concept chip demonstrated yesterday from Intel's Tera-scale Computing Research Program contains 48 cores on a single silicon chip. Using only as much electricity as a single Intel processor, this experimental chip could enable future generations of laptops to "see" just as we humans view the world through our eyes.

Intel engineers envision this multi-core chip as the future of cloud computing. As all 48 cores of this postage stamp-sized chip use 125 watts at their maximum performance, the advent of similar chips could herald a new era of energy-efficient, smaller data centers, making cloud computing less expensive and more portable.

Applications for these chips include the rapid processing of images, allowing for new methods of interacting with computers with a camera, rather than with keyboards or mice. With so much processing power available in a small area, "virtual dance lessons" and more intuitive controls for video games could become commonplace for laptops.


It could be a while before these chips make their way to the consumer market. Intel plans on sharing 100 of these prototype chips with researchers in order to develop software specially honed for the 48-corechip, but details of the prototypes' availability to industry and academic experts are yet to be released. More information on the chip's design and architecture will be presented at the International Solid State Circuits Conference in February in San Francisco.

Pirate Bay Founders Granted Appeal Against Operating Ban

The Pirate Bay and its founders have been on a legal roller coaster ride this year. Directly or indirectly they have been involved in a dozen court cases, most notably the trial in which four people associated with the site were sentenced to one year in jail and hefty fines.

Despite this unfavorable verdict the site remains online, as it adapts to become a torrent portal that is less likely to be shut down.

In yet another attempt to close the site, two of the site?s founders were ordered by the Stockholm District Court to stop operating the site in October, facing fines of $71,000 each if they choose not to comply.

The two founders, Gottfrid Svartholm and Fredrik Neij, both decided to appeal the verdict, and the Appeal Court has now announced that it will take on the case.

Gottfrid argued that the district court lacks the technical skills that are required, which is devastating to a case which is so technically complicated.Fredrik further said that both he and Gottfrid have been living outside Sweden for a long time, adding that The Pirate Bay is no longer hosted in Sweden either.

Aside from the technical difficulties, the legal authorities may also find that it is pretty much impossible to prove that the two are actually working on the site, which is required to impose the fines. The Appeal Court will review these and other issues in the upcoming appeal.

Show Hidden Files and Folders not working

Show Hidden Files and Folders not working?..... If we select the radio button “Show hidden files and folders” and then press Ok.. the changes would just disappear upon opening the dialog again. It was probably some virus attack after which the Windows registry was not being updated properly. So here is what methods to restore it back. There are so many methods to restore back the registry. If one method is not working, please try another one.

Method 1:

Go to registry editor by running regedit in the run box.
Go to this key:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\
Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Advanced


In the right hand area, double click hidden and change the value to 1.

Now you’re all set to go. Check it in your tools menu if the changes have taken effect.
Method 2:

1. Click “Start” -> “Run…” (or press Windows key + R)
2. Type “regedit” and click “Ok”.
3. Find the key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\
Advanced\Folder\Hidden\SHOWALL
4. Look at the “CheckedValue” key… This should be a DWORD key. If it isn’t, delete the key.
5. Create a new key called “CheckedValue” as a DWORD (hexadecimal) with a value of 1.
6. The “Show hidden files & folders” check box should now work normally. Enjoy!
Method 3:

If none of the above methods work, please download our Smart Virus Remover from here:

Smart Virus Remover
Using this Virus Remover please restore your Windows settings and your show hidden files and folders will be set to default.

Microsoft permanently barred from selling Word

Microsoft has been ordered by a US District Court to halt sales of its popular word processing application, Word. Judge Leonard Davis has ruled that the software-giant is guilty of patent infringement and has prohibited it from selling, importing, testing, demonstrating or marketing any Microsoft Word products able to open XML, DOCX, or DOCM files (XML) files containing custom XML.

Plaintiff i4i sued Microsoft in March 2007 claiming that it violated a 1998 software patent (number 5,787,449) for a document system that eliminated the need for manually embedded formatting codes. One of the fundamental features of the markup language XML is that it is readable by both people and machines. XML allows developers and users to define their own tags for data - unlike other markup languages like HTML which have predefined tags.

Microsoft has already paid $200 million after a federal jury ruled that the XML properties of Word 2003 and Word 2007 infringed on i4i's patent. Redmond accumulated another $77 million in fees after the most recent ruling, $40 million for willful patent infringement and $37 million in prejudgment interest. The company must comply within 60 days and is planning to appeal the verdict.

Speed-Up Folder Navigation in Windows XP/Vista

If you are encountering the one of the most common problem of slow opening of my computer in windows xp and contents of my computer as a result display very lately then you will be surprised to know that your computer is not old or slow but there is simple fix to this problem.

Why Does My computer opens slowly ?

The main reason behind is the default option being checked in windows xp to search for network drives and printers every time you open my computer and there may be network drives which are being accessed when you open my computer.

How to Speed up My Computer Opening ?

1. Open My computer >> File Menu >> Tools >> Folder Options >> View
2. Uncheck the first checkbox which says "Automatically search for Network folders and printers".
3. You can also simply Disconnect the Map drives to solve this issue,



Go to Tools >> Disconnect the Map Drives(Network Drives) and select the network drive to disconnect.