বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Is Android becoming the Windows of mobile malware? (Digital Trends)

android virus

Juniper Networks is raising eyebrows in the mobile industry this morning with a new report claiming the incidence of malware targeting Android devices has risen by 472 percent since July of this year. Presumably, that number is augmented by ?hundreds? of malware samples the company uncovered in a series of?third-party?Russian app stores. Juniper describes the Russian malware cache as just the ?tip of the iceberg,? believing there may be thousands of more malware apps waiting to be discovered.

Although many security firms still characterize the threat of mobile malware as relatively low, it?s important to know that those firms are generally comparing the number of threats faced by Android and other mobile operating systems to the those faced by Windows ? which is the absolute king of malware, assaulted by hundreds and even thousands of new trojans, worms, exploits, and variants every day. Saying a platform faces a low threat compared to Windows isn?t saying much at all.

But Juniper?s figures highlight the growing threat of mobile malware, particularly on Android. How do Juniper?s numbers hold up, what?s to blame for rising Android malware, and how can Android users protect themselves and their devices?

Juniper?s figures

Juniper Networks Android Malware infographic Nov 2011

According to Juniper Network, the amount of malware targeting Android has jumped by 472 percent since July, punctuated by very sharp increases in October and November. Juniper says they were seeing steady increases in the amount of Android malware they intercepted in July and August, which saw incidence rates increase by 10 and 18 percent, respectively. However, in September Juniper intercepted more than double the amount of Android malware it had in July (up 110 percent) and that figure jumped to either 111 or 171 percent from October 1 through November 10. (See Juniper?s infographic for more detail?the infographic claims a 111 percent increase most recently, But Juniper?s text says 171 percent.)

The figures echo similarly alarming percentages from other security vendors. This summer, Trend Micro claimed the incidence of Android malware had increased 1,410 percent from January to July 2011. It?published an infographic, too.

Curiously, Juniper provides no hard figures to accompany its percentages, so it?s difficult to know what those percentages mean in absolute terms. It would be nice to compare the number of malware apps out there (and their interception rates) to the number of available Android apps or the number of apps distributed over the same period of time. After all, if a small town of 5,000 people had one serious traffic accident in 2010 and then two serious traffic accidents in 2011, the rate would be up by an alarming 100 percent! However, number of accidents in proportion to the number of drivers ? let alone the number of hours driven in the town during the year ? would still be very, very low. Juniper Networks does describe the cache of Russian malware it found as ?hundreds? of apps, but it?s not clear if those are included in the firm?s 472 percent increase, and offers no other hard figures.

Symantec and Kaspersky similarly offer percentages for recent increases in Android malware, but seem to withhold hard figures ? or, at least, I haven?t been able to find them. McAfee is slightly more helpful: In August it reported a 76 percent increase in malware targeting Android during the second quarter of 2011, and gave a specific number of threats it had identified: 44. Just this week, McAfee described the total number of malicious apps in the wild as ?approximately 200??and that?s across all platforms, including Symbian, Java ME, Windows Mobile, iOS, and others.

The number of apps available on the Android Market stands at about 350,000. Although the total number of threat apps is never truly known ? even to security researchers ? the alarmingly large percentage figures from Juniper and McAfee do seem to suffer from a bit of the small-town problem. Despite some high-profile malware removals from the Android Market (like DroidDream trojans earlier this year), ?in absolute terms, Android malware still a very small portion of the broader Android software ecosystem.

Types of Android malware

There does seem to be basic agreement on the types of Android malware out there. The bulk acts as spyware and tries to steal personal data, including contacts, location, personally identifying information email, messages, and data stashed in log files and other areas of the device. Spyware can also potentially control an Android device, meaning it could place calls, send messages, restart apps, disable locks, control vibrate alerts, and (of course) access the Internet to send collected data to the malware authors ??? or download and install new malware packages.

Spyware represents a bit of a longer-term game for malware authors: They?re hoping they?ll get usable (and sellable) information by keeping an eye on users? phones, and they?ll make their money selling collected email addresses (and potentially financial information) to spammers and cybercriminals.

One form of Android malware that has immediate payoff for malware authors is are SMS Trojans: apps that appear to do something fun or useful, but in the background send SMS messages to premium rate numbers ? the same way many voting competitions, music and ringtone services, and other businesses collect money via text messages. Once those messages are sent, the malware authors have their money, and consumers don?t have much (or any) recourse. The bulk of Android malware apps Juniper says it found in Russian third-party Android markets are SMS Trojans.

Pointing fingers

So even if malware isn?t quite overrunning the ecosystem yet, where is all this malware coming from? Security firms seem to pretty squarely place the bulk of Android malware at the feet of cybercriminals who used to target Java ME and Symbian phones. As those platforms have declined, they?ve moved along to Android, which enables them to leverage some of their working knowledge of Java and is also, conveniently, now the world?s hottest-selling smartphone platform.

In terms of distribution, security firms all agree that third-party Android app stores run a higher risk of malware than trusted sources. A number of Android exploits have been distributed via third-party app stores in Russia and China ? heck, one Chinese example of Android malware uses a public blog as its command-and-control center. The appeal of these app stores in their respective markets is obvious: They use local languages, and their selection of apps and new items is going to be much more in tune with local culture than the broader Android Market. Nonetheless, most of those app stores are completely unregulated and unmonitored: Almost anyone can upload anything, safe or not.

That doesn?t let Google?s Android Market off the hook. Although McAfee recommends Android Market specifically as a trusted source for safe Android apps, other security outfits aren?t so kind. Juniper in particular rips into Google?s management of the Android Market:

?These days, it seems all you need [to upload malware to Android Market] is a developer account, that is relatively easy to anonymize, pay $25 and you can post your applications,? Juniper wrote in its blog. ?With no upfront review process, no one checking to see that your application does what it says, just the world?s largest majority of smartphone users skimming past your application?s description page with whatever description of the application the developer chooses to include.?

Google famously does not review submissions to the Android Market, or require code-signing by a trust authority, although developers must at least code-sign with self-signed certificates. Although Google will remove malicious apps once they?re discovered, realistically that can?t happen until the apps have victimized users.

Staying safe

Android users can take some basic steps to keep their devices and their data safe. Good tips include:
  • Disable the ?unknown sources? option for installing apps in the Android device?s Applications Settings menu. This will help prevent users from inadvertently installing software when, say, accidentally following a malware link in an SMS message, spam, or social networking site. It will also keep the device out of most third-party Android app stores, which seem to be a prime distribution vector for Android malware. However, this may not be an option if users need to sideload custom Android apps for, say, business or work purposes.
  • Research apps before downloading or buying them. Try to stick with apps that have broad third-party recommendations and come from reputable publishers. Check both an app?s and publisher?s ratings.
  • Carefully check app?s permissions. When you install an app, Android will present a list of hardware and software components that the app wants to access, including things like location data, a device?s camera, the Internet, storage, system tools, MMS/SMS, and making phone calls. If the requested permissions don?t seem reasonable, don?t allow the app to install. For instance, a game probably doesn?t have any need to access your contacts, and a photo organizer doesn?t need to send SMS messages.
Makers of security and antivirus software will, of course, recommend users download, install (and, hopefully, purchase) antivirus software for Android. However, the jury seems to be out on how useful security and antivirus apps are for Android ? at least at the moment. A new study from AV-Test (PDF) finds that almost all free Android malware apps don?t offer significant protection against existing Android malware. Paid Android security packages from F-Secure and Kaspersky fared better, but only managed to detect about half the installed threats tested by AV-Test, although they did very well with blocking malware installation.

The most important thing is probably to be aware that there is malware for Android, and let common sense be your guide. If an app seems to good to be true, it might just be carrying a hidden payload that?s after your money and personal information.

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

Most smartphone owners are indifferent about phone security

Google: IP spoofing on the rise

Lookout: 3 in 10 smartphone users will encounter malware this year

More than 800 Android apps are leaking personal data

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111116/tc_digitaltrends/isandroidadreamplatformformalware

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[OOC] Supernatural Survival

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বুধবার, ১৬ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Police move in on Portland park, protesters remain (AP)

PORTLAND, Ore. ? Several hundred protesters, some wearing goggles and gas masks, marched past authorities in a downtown street Sunday, hours after riot police forced Occupy Portland demonstrators out of a pair of weeks-old encampments in nearby parks.

Police moved in shortly before noon and drove protesters into the street after dozens remained in the camp in defiance city officials. Mayor Sam Adams had ordered that the camp shut down Saturday at midnight, citing unhealthy conditions and the encampment's attraction of drug users and thieves.

More than 50 protesters were arrested in the police action, but officers did not use tear gas, rubber bullets or other so-called non-lethal weapons, police said.

After the police raid, the number of demonstrators swelled throughout the afternoon. By early evening, dozens of officers brandishing nightsticks stood shoulder-to-shoulder to hold the protesters back. Authorities retreated and protesters broke the standoff by marching through the streets.

Demonstrators regrouped several blocks away, where they broke into small groups to discuss their future. Some advocated occupying foreclosed homes, others wanted to move onto the Portland State University campus or to the shores of the Willamette River.

The Oregonian reported that many spent hours trying to figure out where protesters without homes could stay. The gathering began to thin out around 8 p.m. KATU said that shortly before 10 p.m., about two dozen demonstrators marched back to area of the encampment, but there was no word of any police resistance.

In the hours after the midnight eviction deadline, the anti-Wall Street protesters and their supporters had flooded the park area even as authorities in other cities across the nation stepped up pressure against demonstrators, arresting dozens of people.

At one point overnight, the Portland crowd swelled to thousands. As dawn arrived, riot police had retreated and most of the crowds had gone home, but protesters who have been at the two parks since Oct. 6 were still there, prompting one organizer to declare the night a victory for the movement.

"We stood up to state power," Jim Oliver told The Associated Press.

It didn't last. Police moved in later as demonstrators held a midday "general assembly" meeting to discuss their next moves. An officer on a loudspeaker warned that anyone who resisted risked arrest and "may also be subject to chemical agents and impact weapons." Demonstrators chanted "we are a peaceful protest."

"We were talking about what we were going to do and then they just started hitting people. Seems like a waste of resources to me," protester Mike Swain, 27, told the AP.

One man was taken away on a stretcher; he was alert and talking to paramedics, and raised a peace sign to fellow protesters, who responded with cheers.

Choya Adkison, 30, said police moved in after giving demonstrators a false sense of calm. They thought they had time to rest, relax and regroup, she said

"Camp was completely vulnerable, completely defenseless" when police moved in, she said. "I'm disappointed that they created a sense of trust by walking away and then completely trampled it."

City officials erected temporary chain-link fences with barbed wire at the top around three adjacent downtown parks, choking off access for demonstrators as parks officials cleaned up.

Police Chief Mike Reese told KGW-TV it was his plan to take the parks in a peaceful manner and that's what happened.

"Our officers have performed exceptionally well," he said.

Even ahead of the police raid, the camp was a shadow of what it had been before Saturday. A large segment of campers were homeless people drawn to the free food and shelter offered by Occupy Portland. They are gone, after outreach workers went through the camp to help them find shelter elsewhere.

And as the Saturday midnight eviction deadline neared, protesters themselves began dismantling tents.

Around 4 a.m., dozens of police formed a line across from demonstrators who had poured into the street. Protesters facing them appeared to be in festive spirits with some banging on drums and plastic pails, another clanging a cowbell while others danced in the streets as a man juggled nearby.

On Sunday at an impromptu news conference, the mayor defended his order to clear the park, saying it is his job to enforce the law and keep the peace. "This is not a game," Adams said.

Officials said that one officer suffered minor injuries when he was hit by some kind of projectile in the leg. Police had prepared for a possible clash, warning that dozens of anarchists may be planning a confrontation with authorities. Officers seized pieces of cement blocks Friday, saying they were told some demonstrators had plans to use them as weapons against police. They said they believe some demonstrators were building shields and trying to collect gas masks.

And police seized incendiary devices, gas masks and marijuana on Sunday after stopping three men for speeding on Interstate 5 south of Portland. The men told police they had left Occupy Portland an hour earlier and were carrying the equipment in anticipation of a confrontation with authorities, the Marion County Sheriff's Office said.

Meanwhile in Oakland, Calif., friends confirmed Sunday that Scott Olsen, the Iraq War veteran who suffered a serious head injury during a police raid on the Occupy Oakland encampment, has been released from the hospital. Olsen suffered a skull fracture during tear-gas filled clashes between police and demonstrators on Oct. 25.

Dottie Guy of Iraq Veterans Against the War said Sunday Olsen was released last week. He can now read and write, but still has trouble talking, she added.

"Considering what happened to him he's doing well," Guy said. "He does have a brain injury so there will be some kind of rehab and physical therapy needed."

Occupy Wall Street supporters nationwide have rallied around Olsen's plight.

Also Sunday, for the third time in three days, Oakland city officials warned protesters that they do not have the right to camp in the plaza in front of City Hall and face immediate arrest. Police did not respond to requests for comment on whether officers were preparing to forcibly clear the camp.

The eviction notices come as officials across the country urged an end to similar gatherings in the wake of three deaths in different cities, including two by gunfire. Demands for Oakland protesters to pack up increased after a man was shot and killed Thursday near the encampment site.

Police Sunday night identified the slain man as 25-year-old Kayode Ola Foster of Oakland, saying his family confirmed he had been staying at the plaza.

Police officer Johnna Watson said witnesses have told police that one of two suspects in the shooting had also been a frequent resident at the plaza. The suspects are being sought and their names haven't been released.

Investigators suspect that the shooting resulted from a fight between two groups of men.

Protesters had said earlier that there was no connection between the shooting and the camp.

The shooting occurred the same day a 35-year-old military veteran apparently committed suicide in a tent at a Burlington, Vt., Occupy encampment. Police said a preliminary investigation showed the veteran fatally shot himself in the head. They said the death raised questions about whether the protest would be allowed to continue.

In other cities over the weekend:

? In Salt Lake City, police arrested 19 people Saturday when protesters refused to leave a park a day after a man as found dead inside his tent at the encampment. The arrests came after police moved into the park early in the evening where protesters had been ordered to leave by the end of the day. About 150 people had been living in the camp there for weeks.

? In Albany, N.Y., police arrested 24 Occupy Albany protesters after they defied an 11 p.m. curfew in a state-owned park. State police officials hauled away the protesters after warning them with megaphones that they were breaking the law in Lafayette Park. They were charged with trespassing.

? In Denver, authorities forced protesters to leave a downtown encampment and arrested four people for interfering with officers who removed illegally pitched tents, said police spokesman Sonny Jackson.

? In San Francisco, violence marked the protest Saturday where police said two demonstrators attacked two police officers in separate incidents during a march. Police spokesman Carlos Manfredi said a protester slashed an officer's hand with a pen knife while another protester shoved an officer, causing facial cuts. He said neither officer was seriously hurt, and the assailants couldn't be located.

___

Associated Press writers Terry Collins in Oakland, Josh Loftin in Salt Lake City, Jim Anderson in Denver and Andrew Dalton in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_re_us/us_occupy_protests

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৫ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Is boy believed buried by volcanic eruption alive?

Courtesy Telemundo / Courtesy Telemundo

Screen grab of a video clip from shortly after the Colombia volcano eruption in 1985 that shows a boy at an orphanage being treated by paramedics. Claudia Ramirez is sure it's her son Andres Felipe Cubides Ramirez.

By Maribel Osorio, Telemundo Correspondent

BOGOTA, Colombia ? Most people thought Andres Felipe Cubides Ramirez died 26 years ago in a devastating volcano. That is except for his mother, Claudia Ramirez, who said her heart told her the boy was still alive even though she had no proof.

There has been no trace of Andres Felipe since Nov. 13, 1985, when the volcano erupted, destroying her town of Armero, Colombia.???

That day, as she watched via television from the capital Bogota, Claudia saw how the lava buried her parents, husband, friends and neighbors, 20,000 of the town?s nearly 30,000 residents died. Her town, Armero, was the city worst-affected by the eruption and was buried by mud and rubble from the eruption. There was no reason to believe little Andres Felipe, then 6 years old, didn't also perish.


At the time, Claudia was a 21-year-old student studying dentistry at the university in Bogota, 50 miles away from Armero; her parents took care of Andres Felipe while she was at school.?

She intensely looked for him all over the country during the first year after the tragedy and posted missing child photos of him all over Colombia. But everything seemed to indicate that he had died along with thousands of others.

For more than two decades, Claudia refused to watch the images from the scene that were like a dagger to her heart. But as fate would have it, a few weeks ago she was watching TV and saw a show all about the anniversary of the volcanic eruption ? that?s when she saw the video clip that she's sure shows her son.??

In the clip from shortly after the volcanic eruption, a boy is at an orphanage being treated by paramedics, drinking water and trembling from the cold but without injuries. Claudia contacted the TV producers and watched the video again at the TV station. She now has no doubts that it is her son and showed photos of him around that age to make her point.

Courtesy Telemundo / Courtesy Telemundo

A photo of the missing boy Andres Felipe Cubides Ramirez. He would now be 32 years old.

Claudia still doesn't have an answer from the institute that coordinated adoptions from the tragedy. But she's convinced that Andres Felipe was adopted by someone abroad, because that was what happened to many children who survived.

Since she does not know what country he may be in, she has begun an Internet crusade to find him. This is the Facebook page she set up with photos of her son as a boy.??

During a recent interview she showed photos of his youth and, between tears, she recalled how his grandmother bought him three Spider-man costumes because after a Halloween party he decided he never wanted to wear anything else.

She now hopes that the old photos of her Andres-Felipe will help identify her grown-up son, who would be about to turn 32.

Anyone with information about Andres Felipe is urged to contact the Armando Armero Foundation at: fundacion@armandoarmero.com.

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/15/8819096-is-boy-believed-buried-by-volcanic-eruption-alive

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NBC: SNL With Emma Stone and Coldplay Preview Videos

It is Saturday night and that means an all new Saturday Night Live, woohoo! Tonight is going to be one heck of show my friends and you can get a little preview right here, sweet. The lovely and talented Emma Stone will host SNL for the second time this evening. Coldplay will join Stone on the show tonight as the musical guest that I have no doubt they will rock the freaking house. Seriously love me some Coldplay. If you are true SNL fan like me then you probably can?t wait to see the show tonight. Well you are in luck because I just so happen to have a couple of clips for you to check out, just to get you ready for the show. In the first clip we have Emma and the guys poking a little fun at well each other. There is some Easy A comments and a little cold play joke that I really can not do justice, so you have to check it out because it is laugh out loud funny. That is not all, in this second promo Emma does a few little skits with the amazingly talented Fred Armisen. Let?s just say at [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/TMH16lOJykc/

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রবিবার, ১৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Russia races to salvage stranded Mars probe

MOSCOW | Fri Nov 11, 2011 8:22am EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia raced on Thursday to salvage a spacecraft bound for a moon of Mars that is stranded in the Earth's orbit, with just days left before the window closes on its first interplanetary mission in 15 years.

So far Russian controllers have failed to establish contact with the $163-million, unmanned probe, leaving little hope of recovering the ambitious mission that was to reassert Russia's place at the front lines of space exploration.

Following the launch from Russia's Baikonur launch pad in Kazakhstan early on Wednesday, the Phobos-Grunt probe is stuck in a dangerously low orbit, creating a drag that could eventually send it crashing back to Earth.

Russia's space agency said it had at least three days to try to fix the problem and steer the craft on to its correct path, and will make another attempt when it passes over Baikonur later today, a spokesman said.

Failure so soon after lift off in the three-year mission to bring back soil -- "grunt" in Russian -- from the Martian moon Phobos would be a major blow to the pride of the Russian space industry, adding to a humiliating series of setbacks.

"So far all efforts to communicate with the craft have been unsuccessful," lead mission scientist Alexander Zakharov of Moscow's Space Research Institute told Reuters.

"They are trying everything including visual methods to try to assess what is wrong with it, but of course the situation doesn't inspire much hope."

Experts say the post-launch problems are linked to the craft's on board flight computer, which failed to fire two engine burns to send it on its trajectory toward Mars.

There is a small chance the software could be reprogrammed, if controllers can link with the craft. But if the troubles are hardware related, the mission is likely lost, Zakharov and other industry sources said.

Russia is relying on a single ground site to try to reach the craft once every few hours along its orbit.

"In my opinion Phobos-Grunt is lost," Vladimir Uvarov, a former chief Russian military expert on space, told the state-run Rossiiskaya Gazeta.

China also could be disappointed after entrusting its first interplanetary Mars satellite, Yinghuo-1, to piggyback on the mission.

Phobos-Grunt is also carrying bacteria, plant seeds and tiny animals known as water bears, part of a U.S. study to see if they could survive beyond the Earth's protective bubble.

The plan was for Phobos-Grunt to reach Mars' orbit next year, touch down on the larger of its two tiny moons in 2013, collect a sample from the surface and fly back to Earth in 2014.

Dust from Phobos, scientist say, would shed light on the genesis of the solar system and Mars' enduring mysteries.

If it is lost, it will join a long string of over a dozen Soviet and Russian missions to fail en route to Mars, while U.S. rovers have logged hundreds of hours on the Red Planet.

When the first post-Soviet Mars-96 probe broke up over the Pacific, it was seen as a proof of the industry's deterioration after a generation of brain drain and crimped budgets.

NASA will launch a $2.5 billion rover designed to assess the planet's suitability for life later this month, toward the end of a launch window for Mars flights that comes every 780 days.

If Phobos-Grunt cannot be bounced out of orbit, the massive craft will eventually crash back to Earth with a full payload of toxic hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide fuel and small cargo of radioactive cobalt-57.

It is unclear how much of it will survive the fiery plunge through the atmosphere.

(Writing by Alissa de Carbonnel, Editing by Rosalind Russell)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/dNfzVkULNxk/us-russia-mars-probe-f-idUSTRE7AA31720111111

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