Archive: March, 2009

Internet-Based Crime Rises by 33%

Internet-based crime has dramatically increased by 33% last year according to The Internet Crime Complaint Center.

IC3 released a report today with rather dramatic and surprising results – Cybercrime is on the rise following two straight years of decline. The graph below explains the full situation:

Source: IC3

Source: IC3

As we  can see by the bar chart above, complaints have been steadily decreasing since 2005. That is until the economic crisis hit and people started becoming desperate. In 2008, the number of reported cases of internet-based crime rose from 206,884 complaints to over 275,000. That’s a massive and unexpected jump.

Although complaints have suddenly increased, damage hasn’t:

Source: IC3

Source: IC3

The dollar-loss damage by these crimes has actually been increasing steadily since 2005, annually jumping to a larger sum than the year before.

This begs the question: Has cybercrime really increased at such a rapid pace since 2007? Or is it simply the fact that users were unaware they were being scammed and have only taken up reporting these fraudulent crimes because money is difficult to come by now?

Spam Returns to 94% of All Emails Sent

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In November 2008, McColo corp was shutdown by a group of security experts from a US web hosting firm. McColo was a web-hosting servers that spammers, scammers and hackers were using exclusively to spam people with emails and to co-ordinate large spamming attacks. Immediately after McColo was shutdown spam traffic dropped a massive 70% according to Postini (anti-spam division of Google), much to the joy and cheers of internet folk all over.

Unfortunately, the good news ends here. Since the November shutdown of McColo, the spammers have since recovered and have made the necessary shift from static nodes (like McColo) into a more peer-to-peer based system. In other words, spam is back and it’s going to be more difficult to shut down in the future.

“What the spammers have been using to rebuild is more technically advanced than what got taken out and is itself a more resilient technology,”

Postini announced recently that spam levels have risen back to their previous levels – 94% of all emails sent worldwide are spam.

Spam truly is back, and here to stay.

Microsoft Shutting Down Encarta

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Microsoft posted a notice to all Encarta users that the online and software versions of Microsoft Encarta will be discontinued this year.

October 31 2009 will mark the day that all MSN Encarta websites will be taken offline (other than the Japanese version which will run until the end of December 2009). Futhermore, Encarta will cease to be sold as a retail option in June 2009.

Microsoft states in their notice that the reason for the shutdown is that

“the category of traditional encyclopedias and reference material has changed. People today seek and consume information in considerably different ways than in years past.”

In other words, Wikipedia killed Encarta.

I must admit, I’m sad to see the Encarta franchise go. I still remember being incredibly young (under the age of 10) watching videos and listening to sound clips of wild animals on Encarta ’95. But purely based on wealth and range of information, Wikipedia had a much wider scope than Encarta ever could achieve.

UPDATE: ‘Imminent’ Sony Playstation Announcement Coming [Rumor]

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Update: It appears that the announcement was indeed the $99 Playstation 2, as reported by ShackNews.

The internet world is currently buzzing with the rumor that Sony will be making an important announcement concerning the Playstation tomorrow.

The rumor was first posted on Smarthouse, and was later confirmed by Kotaku who was contacted directly by Sony to confirm an announcement was coming.

There are quite a few ideas and theories as to what Sony is planning to announce. Some people reckon a PS3 or PS2 price drop, whilst some commentators joke that it might be the PS4. What can be assured however is that the truth will come out tomorrow.

Expect updates soon.

Intel’s Nehalem Makes It’s Way to Servers

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Intel has announced that Nehalem-based Xeon processors are on their way to servers worldwide.

You may be familiar with the desktop range of “Nehalem” Core i7 processors from Intel, which are extremely fast. Intel is attempting to bring this new burst of speed and technology breakthrough to servers by creating Xeon processors based on the Nehalem architecture.

The new Xeon chips will have a lot of advantages over current processors, most importantly and integrated memory controller (for that extra “oomph”) and hyper-threading that can simulate up to 16 cores. That’s right, 16. As well as a feature called Turbo Boost (which desktop enthusiasts should be familiar with), which overclocks the processor as needed.

Quite a few companies have already jumped on the bandwagon as eager early-adopters, including Dreamworks and IBM, who are implementing them in all new servers they are currently providing.

Importantly however, nobody is expecting Intel to cause an uproar and rapidly take over the market, as they did with their Core 2 Duo range a few years back. Reason? Intel already has a massive market share in the server environment. Ashok Kumar says,

“We expect only an incremental upside on a unit basis”

FPS Video Games Improve Eyesight According to New study

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This is good news for gamers (including myself) worldwide.

U.S Researchers announced today that after a series of studies that adults who frequently play action-packed video games seem to be improving their eyesight and awareness dramatically.

A total of 22 students were split into two groups. The first group played fast-paced and twitch-reflex dependent games:  the WWII blockbuster, Call of Duty 2 and Epic’s Unreal Tournament 2004. The second group of students were tasked with playing the more casual and less frantic game, The Sims 2, by Electronic Arts.

50 hours of gaming, and nine weeks later the researcher’s drew a interesting conclusion:

“We’ve found that action video games train the brain to process the existing visual information more efficiently, and the improvements last for months after game play stopped.”

says Daphne Bavelier, of of the University of Rochester. In fact, test subjects who played the two action games were 43% better at determining the difference between close shades of gray, whilst the casual gamers belonging to the second group showed no improvements at all.

The good news doesn’t end there for hardcore gamers. According to the study, long-time and frequent gamers were 58% better at noticing slight contrast changes when compared to the average person.

How is this possible you may ask? According to modern science the only real way of improving visual acuity is with either surgery or glasses? Daphnew Bavelier offers an explanation:

“When people play action games, they’re changing the brain’s pathway responsible for visual processing. These games push the human visual system to the limits and the brain adapts to it”

Windows 7 Build 7068 On Torrent Websites

Credit: DownloadSquad

Credit: DownloadSquad

They just seem to be coming quicker, even faster than Build 7057.

The latest version of Microsoft’s next operation system has been leaked onto Mininova, this time version 7068. The build date is known to be 21 March 2009. That’s around a week ago.

DownloadSquad even considers the possible fact the Microsoft themselves are responsible for the leak, or at least deliberately not noticing due to the high interest the leaked versions are generating:

The newest leak comes less than a week after 7068′s build date – March 21, 2009. How are the files getting out so quickly? I have to believe that if Microsoft isn’t responsible for the leaks themselves that they are, at the very least, more than happy to turn a blind eye.

nVidia Files Countersuit Against Intel

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nVidia has responded to Intel’s dispute last month, which saw Intel wishing to take nVidia to court regarding Intel’s “Nehalem” (Core i7) processors and nVidia’s right to manufacture i7 motherboards.

nVidia had no other choice, according to company CEO and president Jen-Hsun Huang:

“Nvidia did not initiate this legal dispute, but we must defend ourselves…Intel’s actions are intended to block us from making use of the very license rights that they agreed to provide.”"

The dispute concerns a joint agreement by Intel and nVidia in 2004, which gave nVidia the legal right to manufacture motherboards for Intel’s processors. Last month Intel decided to sue nVidia, stating in their lawsuit that the 2004 agreement didn’t include Intel’s Nehalem processors.

Google Docs Gets Drawing Functionality

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In a recent blog post over the Google Docs Blog, it was announced that Google’s online and collaborative document editor has been injected with a dose of creativity via a new Drawing mode.

It’s easy to create drawings using lines, free hand scribbles, text labels and a large choice of shapes that you can move, resize, rotate and adjust. Group, order, align and distribute and other features are available when you select objects you’ve drawn. You can also customize a range of shape properties, from line widths to fill color, and from arrowheads to font size, and much more. If you change your mind, there is undo and redo. You can collaborate with a friend or colleague on a drawing, or work alone, just as you can in Google Docs today.

The tech came from Tonic Systems, which Google managed to acquire in 2007.

British Pupils to Study Blogs, Twitter and Wikipedia instead of History

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Now that’s a statement nobody would believe.

In a recent discovery of a new education proposal, children in Britain will no longer be forced to study the World War II and the Victorian ages, instead those parts of history will be replaced with compulsory studies of Twitter, Wikipedia and Blogging after a document was uncovered by The Guardian.

This is only part of a massive curriculum overhaul that’s taking the focus of teaching back to catering for a more modern and flexible approach. This knowledge (which the pupils will be taught and learned up to the age of 11) is designed to adequately prepare children for a modernized and constantly-changing world.

If the proposal is approved, one of the requirements would be the following:

  • Children to leave primary school familiar with blogging, podcasts, Wikipedia and Twitter as sources of information and forms of communication. They must gain “fluency” in handwriting and keyboard skills, and learn how to use a spellchecker alongside how to spell.

There is both strong criticism, and strong support for the proposal, and nobody is quite sure what to expect.