Archive for RB

4th of July

Independence Day!

The 4th of July in Ann Arbor

The 4th in Ann Arbor

Sean Munson on Flickr

In the spirit of 1776 go out and do something to take our country back from wall street, BP, and the politicians.

  • Get smarter about something important
  • Turn off the TV
  • Write a letter to your representatives
  • Move your money to a credit union
  • Share a ride
  • Boycott BP
  • Vote

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Copiers Get Politicized

Copiers Get PoliticizedThe politicians in Washington have politicized the data breach threats posed by copiers. The FTC claims it is reviewing concerns that digital copy machines retain sensitive information and the Commission is reaching out to retailers and government agencies to safeguard users’ private data.

copy machinesFTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz recently said in a letter (PDF) to Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) that the agency has launched an education campaign around informing users of copy machines. The FTC will try to educate users that copier hard drives keep critical information such as financial and health data. Unless this data is dealt with correctly, it creates a regulatory threat (SOX and HIPAA). Identity thieves can access the data kept on the machines, particularly as copiers are resold without wiping clean hard drives.

Like you, we also are concerned that personal information can be so easily retrieved by copiers, making it vulnerable to misuse by identity thieves,” Leibowtiz wrote.

The privacy implications of digital copy machines stem from a report by CBS that showed copiers were essentially acting like computers, with hard drives data being circulated among several parties as copiers were resold. Markey had called for an investigation into the issue.

rb-

I know I feel better about this risk now that the politicians and a federal bureaucracy are looking after my best interests. </snark>

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Detroit PC’s Cleaner Than Most

Detroit PC's Cleaner Than MostHelp Net Security reports that Detroit has one of the lowest malware infection rates in the US, based on information from Enigma Software Group. An analysis of more than one million malware infections in the United States shows that only PC’s in Boise, ID and Memphis, TN have malware infection rates less than Motown’s.

Enigma recently pulled a 30-day history of infections in the 100 largest cities in the United States. Not surprisingly, New York City had the most infections, because New York has the most computers. However, after the number of infections as a percentage of a city’s population was considered, Atlanta, GA and Birmingham, AL have the highest malware infection rates in the United States.

“Malware makers are becoming more and more sophisticated, and the risk they pose to your computer and your valuable personal information is growing,” says Enigma Software Group CEO Alvin Estevez told Help Net Security. “We think it’s important to keep an eye on where the malware is doing the most damage and our Malware Tracker map (link broken a the far end) helps us and consumers know what’s going on.

According to this data, the cities with the highest PC malware infection rates are:

  1. Atlanta, GA
  2. Birmingham, AL
  3. Denver, CO
  4. Chesapeake, VA
  5. Madison, WI.

Other notable cities included:

28. Dallas
35. San Francisco
51. Houston
63. Los Angeles
64. Chicago
84. Phoenix
85. New York City
89. Philadelphia

Enigma Software Group’s Malware Tracker uses data from its SpyHunter software to estimate how many computers have worms and Trojan infecting them. After collecting the data, it uses the Google Maps API, to zoom into specific neighborhoods and find out who’s infected. The data can also be separated into different types of malware.

rb-

While it is always a plus to have good things to say about Detroit, it does not take much analysis to know these stats do not mean that Detroiters are better PC drivers than the rest of the world. The first thing I noticed about the Enigma map was that Ontario had more outbreaks reported than most of the U.S. east coast. I would attribute that to the degree of market penetration by Enigma’s software.

A second cause, which I wrote about last March when Symantec declared Detroit the least risky online city, is that the depression global financial crisis turns these stats on their head. Symantec found that Detroit ranked last in categories like:

  • WiFi and hotspots per capita,
  • Annual expenditures per household on Internet Access and Computers,
  • Adult Internet use.

All of which will cut the number of personal PC’s with malware infections.

Related article

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Google Remotely Removes Apps

Google Remotely Removes Apps– Updated 03-19-2011 – After the recent discovery of some 50+ malicious applications on the official Android Marketplace, Google removed the malware as soon as they became aware of their existence. According to Help Net Security, this was four days too late to prevent the tainted applications from being downloaded over 50,000 times.

In response, Google remotely executed its Android kill switch to delete the apps in question. Google is pushing an update to close the software hole.

In an official confirmation of the incident, Rich Cannings, Android Security Lead says that Google will notify the owners of the affected devices after the malicious app(s) are deleted and the update is installed, “You are not required to take any action from there; the update will automatically undo the exploit,” he explained. </update>

Over at the Android Developers Blog, Rich Cannings, Android Security Lead details how Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) can remotely remove applications from an Android phone. The article explains how the Android Security team removed two applications that violated the Android Market Terms of Service.

The Google article says, “...we’ve also developed technologies and processes to remotely remove an installed application from devices.”  The article says that Google chose to remove the applications because they knew better, “ … we decided … to exercise our remote application removal feature…”. Google does try to minimize the impact of this ability in Chrome by stating,  While we hope to not have to use it, we know that we have the capability to take swift action …

I wrote about Google’s and Apple’s control of the OS in 2009. The master marketers at Google have spun this ability to delete any file to be a good thing. However, nowhere in the article does Google state that it will not remove files in an arbitrary fashion like Amazon’s 2009 big brother-like overnight removal of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm from Kindles.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Keyboard Viruses

Keyboard VirusesComputer keyboards are so dirty they could cause symptoms of food poisoning and other illnesses, according to an article on InfoWeek. British researchers for Which? Computing says that your computer keyboard is filthier than toilets. The site had a microbiologist compare germs on 33 office keyboards to toilets and bathroom door handles and found the keyboards contained the most bacteria.

The keyboards were so dirty, they could cause symptoms of food poisoning and other illnesses, according to the article. One keyboard had 150 times the recommended limits on bacteria and was five times as dirty as one of the toilet seats. The magazine said that office workers who fail to wash their hands after using the bathroom and those who eat lunch at their desks are likely to blame for the dirty keyboards. Half the people surveyed said they clean their keyboards less than once a month. Ten percent said they never clean their keyboards, and 20% said they never clean their mouse.

Another survey by the University of Arizona‘s Dr. Charles Gerba contained similar findings. He found that women’s makeup, phones, pocketbooks, hand lotion bottles, keyboards, desk drawers, and mice had the most germs. Men’s wallets, handheld devices, and phones topped the male list. That study found that women’s desks contained, on average, seven times more germs than men’s desks. Gerba, whose study was backed by Clorox, recommended frequent hand washing and the use of disinfectant wipes. The British report recommends turning off computers, shaking out food crumbs, using a damp cloth to wipe surfaces, and following up by disinfecting with alcohol wipes.

Related articles
  • Technology and Toilet Seats: The Skinny on Germ Transmission (medicaldaily.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.