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Audio SPAM in Your Luxury Import

Audio SPAM in Your Luxury Import

Toyota has announced that new Lexus vehicles will start being delivered later this year. The luxury car comes equipped with a system that can send voice messages sent directly from the automaker to its drivers. The “service” called Lexus Insider will let Lexus send audio messages to owners on whatever subject it chooses.

verbal spamReports say the tips could range from making the best use of the vehicles’ features to suggestions for a scenic drive. Jon Bucci, vice president of Toyota’s U.S. advanced technology unit says the Lexus messages can be highly targeted. The messages can be tailored for those who have a specific vehicle type or who live in a particular ZIP code, which seems like verbal spam to me.

William Matthies of Coyote Insight and a longtime consumer electronics executive opined in USA Today.  “You’ve got the same thing coming to your home now. It strikes me as the same thing” as junk mail. Assertions that the messages will be targeted and useful enough to appeal to particular drivers don’t impress Mr. Matthies. “They’re not claiming anything different than all direct marketers claim,” he says.

Perhaps, Toyota will drop the price of a Lexus, now that its customers are a captive audience to their marketing machine.

Related articles
  • Lexus: Made in America? (features.blogs.fortune.cnn.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.

Ransomware Gets Tougher

Ransomware Gets TougherAnti-malware vendor Trend Micro has noted an increase in ransomware. According to Wikipedia ransomware is a type of malware that encrypts the data belonging to an individual on a computer, demanding a ransom for its restoration.

This type of ransom attack can be accomplished by (for example) attaching a specially crafted file/program to an e-mail message and sending this to the victim. If the victim opens/executes the attachment, the program encrypts a number of files on the victim’s computer. A ransom note is then left for the victim. The victim will be unable to open the encrypted files without the correct decryption key.

Once the ransom demanded in the ransom note is paid, the attacker may (or may not) send the decryption key, enabling decryption of the “kidnapped” files.

Recently, Trend Micro Advanced Threats Researcher Ivan Macalintal reported that a new version of the GPcode ransomware has surfaced, It is said that Gpcode[dot]ag utilizes a 660-bit RSA public modulus. Attackers appear to be upping the ante, in early June 2008, another Gpcode variant, Gpcode [dor]ak, has been detected and researchers believe it utilizes an RSA encryption algorithm with a 1024-bit public key. “We estimate it would take around 15 million modern computers, running for about a year, to crack such a key,” writes Aleks Gostev, senior virus analyst at Kaspersky, on the company’s blog.

The rise of ransomware makes regular successful data backups even more important. With current backups, you can delete the files in question, restore them from your backup and let someone else pay the attacker.

 

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.

Converting from Centrex to a PBX

Converting from Centrex to a PBXSomething to be aware of as you plan a migration from Centrex to PBX or VoIP. There is a potential that if the customer does not use the phone system that the LEC sells, the LEC may charge the customer for the in-house wiring.  There have been cases where the LEC was seeking over $100,000 for the wiring after the customer switched.

Cable plant

In some areas, regulators have allowed the LEC to carry some OSP (Outside Plant Cables) on the regulated side of the books so some projected accounting value minus the depreciation would need to be recovered by the LEC if the customer were to leave the LEC. OSP has a life expectancy of 25 years or more, especially in environmentally protected locations such as equipment rooms.

A general rule of thumb is if the cable is black jacketed it is OSP. If the cable is gray or beige it is Inside Wire or cable such as riser. In some states, at the time of the ATT break up and thereafter black jacketed cable is still carried on the LEC’s books while the gray jacket is expensed. However, the customer should talk to the LEC OSPE (Outside Plant Engineer) as soon as possible to determine your specific situation.

The OSPE may want the customer to buy the risers and black jacket, which may include a 50-year-old black jacket, a mixture of Paper & Lead (a method of insulating conductors using paper pulp and covering in a lead jacket) as well as more current PIC (Plastic Insulated Cable).

An option would be to rebuild the complex. This option could be less expensive and easier than negotiating with the OSPE to take over 50 years of infrastructure.  Infrastructure which will never support any modern high-speed services.

Rebuilding the infrastructure also provides an opportunity to turn the tables on the LEC. With their own infrastructure, it is possible for the Owner to tell the LEC to vacate the building since they no longer provide service beyond the MDF. Maybe this is your opportunity to link the buildings with fiber and replace older copper while it is in good shape (having been inside most of its life).

Another tactic would be to convince the Telco into certifying that they had “abandoned the cable in place.” If the LEC has installed the infrastructure, and if they want to claim ownership of the cable then they would be responsible for removing the cable as is required by state/local building codes. In many areas, if a cable is not terminated on both ends then it is considered to be abandoned and must be removed. Removing cable is almost as expensive as installing it.

PBX Circuit sales

Another advantage Owners may have is that the LEC is the Centrex provider. A PBX deployment still represents an opportunity for DS-1, DS-3, and trunks sale. Another lever would be to keep a small Centrex as a backup, as part of a business continuity plan as well as ISDN services to remote locations.

One consideration is that when taking over the cable plant the LEC will have to deal with the fact that there may be customers within the facilities that were not part of the enterprise and which were customers of the LEC. We ended up having to sign a “Shared Sheath” or condominium agreement with the owner. The condominium agreement will let the LEC support their customers on the Owners riser system. The Owner will have to provide a technician to help the LEC in mapping out cable pathways for their customers.

Related articles

 

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.

RIP Windows XP

Updated – 08-08-08 Business PC buyers are still overwhelmingly opting for Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows XP according to HP (HPQ). Rob Kingston, Group Manager of Commercial Product Marketing for HP said in an article in APC, “Looking into the crystal ball, I don’t think businesses will see much value in upgrading to Vista until late next year, and even so, Microsoft will probably have come out with something else by then.”

RIP Windows XPToday 06-30-08 was the last day Windows XP was officially available for purchase from retail outlets, major resellers, and OEM hardware manufacturers. That of course does not mean XP is completely gone. There is still a handful of ways to get your mitts on XP.

  • Users that have Vista Ultimate and Vista Business licenses can choose to downgrade to Windows XP if they wish. Dell (DELL) is offering the downgrade option through January 31, 2009, and HP will offer the XP downgrade option on most of its business desktops and notebooks through at least July 30, 2009.
  • Smaller software resellers will be able to sell Windows XP until January 2009, they just can’t buy any more copies.
  • Another place to look would be eBay, as always, Caveat emptor.
  • Microsoft will continue to sell XP for ultraportable laptops or Nettops such as the ASUS (2357) Eee.

Microsoft says it will continue to offer tech support for Windows XP until the end of 2009 and offer limited support in some form until 2014 by then, Microsoft should have released Windows 7, the next version of its desktop OS.

Related articles

 

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 LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

1 Billion PCs

1 Billion PCsCNet News ran a blurb from Gartner. The infobit suggests that the number of personal computers in use around the world has exceeded 1 billion. This report counted installed PCs and not machines sold.

PC growth

The firm also predicts that this number will double by 2014. They say most of this growth will occur in developing markets. Gartner analysts suggest that the emerging markets will account for 70 percent of the next billion PCs to come online. They named dropping prices and improved Internet access as factors driving that trend.

eWaste concerns

According to Gartner, in 2008, some 180 million computers, or 16 percent of those now in use globally, will be retired. “We estimate a fifth of these, or some 35 million PCs, will be dumped into landfill with little or no regard for their toxic content,” Meike Escherich, principal research analyst at Gartner, said in a statement. The challenge of disposing safely of electronics waste will also expand in developing markets in the coming years, she added.

 

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.