Gargantuan SQL injection infects 3.8 million URLs, installs rogue antivirus

LizaMoon SQL injection rogue AV
Over the last few days, a mass SQL injection attack has been quickly gathering speed. Just three days ago only 28,000 URLs were affected, but at the time of writing, there could be up to 3.8 million infected URLs.

Websense
has a complete write up the attack, dubbed 'LizaMoon,' but here's the basic gist: it looks like someone is exploiting a vulnerabilty (or vulnerabilities) in hundreds of thousands of websites running on Microsoft SQL Server 2003 and 2005. It's not yet known whether this is a vulnerability in SQL Server, or simply a case of outdated, unmaintained, and easily-exploitable CMSes.

The attack takes the form of an SQL injection, which then inserts a link to a JavaScript file hosted on the attacker's server. This is repeated over and over until every Web page in the SQL database has been infected -- and considering 3.8 million URLs have been infected, you can see that this is a very easy, and automated, attack.

Fortunately, the JavaScript isn't particularly malicious: it pops up a rogue AV program called Windows Stability Center, but that's it. Better yet, the rogue antivirus is already recognized by a bunch of real antivirus suites, including Avast, Panda and Microsoft Security Essentials.

The real problem with SQL injection attacks is that there's nothing we surfers can do about them. There will always be old and unmaintained websites, and thus SQL injections will remain one of the easiest and most lucrative tools of hackers and spammers alike. All you can do is keep your antivirus and anti-malware software up to date, and pray.

Gargantuan SQL injection infects 3.8 million URLs, installs rogue antivirus originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 01 Apr 2011 05:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/01/massive-sql-injection-infects-3-8-million-urls-installs-rogue-a/

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Steve Ballmer's Buying the Sacramento Kings and Bringing Basketball Back to Seattle

Steve Ballmer rules and now he rules even more because he's supposedly about to buy the Sacramento Kings and move them back to Seattle. We'll now open the floor to team name ideas. More »

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/FKeaTfTtvSk/ballmers-buying-a-basketball-team

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iHome iW3 AirPlay Wireless Stereo Speaker System with Rechargeable Battery review

ihome-iw3-1

iHome makes a lot of nice accessories for Apple products, and I’ve gotten to review quite a few things.  I’ve reviewed docking speakers and Bluetooth speakers, but the iW3 AirPlay Wireless Stereo Speaker System is the first AirPlay speaker from iHome that I’ve gotten to try.  As you know by now, I have a lot of Apple products in my house.  I now have a mixture of iOS devices with the old 30-pin connectors and the new Lightning connectors, so docking speakers aren’t very convenient anymore.  AirPlay speakers that don’t rely on any connector are the way to go in the Cloninger household these days.  So, let’s give the iW3 a closer look and listen.

ihome-iw3-2The iW3 is a black monolith with a silver band at the base.  The front and sides of the speaker are covered with a stretchy knit fabric.  Unfortunately, this fabric is a pet-hair magnet.  My shiba inu’s orange hair shows up nicely against the black.  The iW3 also seems to be available in gray and red.

As usual with iHome speakers, I don’t find a lot of technical specifications. The speaker is 9.4 inches tall and about 4.6″ square.  It weighs 3 pounds, 10.4 ounces on my digital kitchen scale.  iHome says this is a stereo speaker with four active speakers with “custom Reson8 speaker chambers and SRS TruBass digital sound processing for dynamic audio performance.”  There are no specifications for frequency range.

The iW3 is an AirPlay speaker, meaning it connects to your WiFi network and is available to any Apple products on your network.  AirPlay speakers are available to iOS devices, such as iPhones, iPod touch, and iPads, or computers running iTunes that are connected to the same network.  AirPlay, unlike Bluetooth, allows you to connect your music source to multiple AirPlay speakers at once, so you could have several of these iW3 speakers scattered around your house and send music to all of them simultaneously for a house full of sound.  You don’t have the 30-ft connection limit with AirPlay.  Your speaker can be anywhere that your WiFi signal reaches.

ihome-iw3-3The back of the speaker has the master power switch (button with the orange/red halo on the left) and a WiFi network setup button (far right).  Between them is a network status light that indicates connection setup mode, connection established, and no connection status.  On the bottom row, you’ll see an Aux-in connector where you can connect non-AirPlay audio sources with a 3.5mm audio cable (not included).  The middle USB port allows you to connect an Apple device with either a 30-pin or Lightning connector (you’ll have to supply your own Lightning cable) to charge the device as you play music in “local mode”.  Local mode doesn’t use the AirPlay connection, so you can connect non-iOS iPods and use them as the audio source for  the speaker.  The rightmost button is used for firmware updates.

The indentation at the top is a handle for carrying the iW3 speaker.

ihome-iw3-4The iW3 comes with a collection of booklets, a power adapter, a charging base (middle of bottom row), and a 30-pin USB cable.  This cable can be used to connect an iPod without AirPlay capabilities, as mentioned before, or for charging an iOS device.  It is also used setting up the speaker using your iOS device and WiFi sharing mode.  I simply turned on the master power switch on the back of the speaker, connected my iPad mini to the USB port on the back of the iW3, and then pressed the network setup button.  (I had to use my own Lightning cable, as the iW3 didn’t come with one.)  After a couple of seconds, a pop-up message asked if I wanted to share my iPad’s WiFi settings with the iW3.  I said yes, and the iW3 was connected to my network and ready for use.

You can also manually setup the network connection using the iHome Setup app that’s been installed on an iOS device you’ve connected to the USB port on the back of the speaker, or you can use a WiFi-connected computer for establishing the iW3′s connection to your network.

ihome-iw3-5The bottom of the iW3 has a depression with a couple of metal connectors.  This is for the charging base.

ihome-iw3-6The speaker sits on the charging base.  The base not only provides power to the speaker, it charges the internal rechargeable lithium-ion battery.  When the battery is fully charged (takes about 10 hours), you’ll be able to carry the speaker from room to room with you – anywhere your WiFi signal reaches – without having to worry about finding an electrical outlet where you’re going.  You aren’t restricted to the 30-ft limit of a Bluetooth connection with this speaker.

ihome-iw3-7There’s a status light at the top of the front.  Solid green shows the unit is on; blinking green shows the volume is muted.  Solid red shows the battery is charging; blinking red shows the battery needs charging.

ihome-iw3-8When you are streaming music to the speaker through AirPlay, you can control playback on your iOS device or computer.  You can also control playback and volume using the buttons on the top of the iW3.  Which of these buttons light up and are functional depends on the speaker’s mode.  This image shows the AirPlay mode, as indicated by the lighted AirPlay mode button (2nd from right, bottom row).  Other connection modes might disable the playback buttons but leave the volume control buttons active.  The iW3 doesn’t come with a remote control.

I connected my iPad mini to the iW3 speaker via AirPlay and gave it a try.  I listened to several genres and various artists.  The speaker has an impressive amount of bass, but it of course doesn’t rattle the windows.  You hear the bass, but you don’t feel it.  The sound is clean and clear, with no distortion even when I cranked the volume up to an uncomfortable level.  The iW3 can certainly fill the room with sound.  It sounded good at lower sound levels, too.

I listened to vocal music, rock, pop, orchestral, and dance music.  I thought it sounded best with songs that didn’t have an over-emphasized bottom end.  Vocals from Josh Groban and Israel Kamakawiwoʻole sounded rich and warm, and the speaker seemed designed for acoustic guitars.  Music never seemed overly bright or harsh.  I listened to Powerman 5000; the song sounded good, but it was missing some of the bottom end – the thumping part that makes you want to get up and throw yourself around the room because you just can’t sit still.  If dance/club/hip-hop/rap is your life, this speaker won’t be your best choice.  If you prefer pop/vocal/Bluegrass, even orchestral or rock, you’ll be pleased with the sound from this small speaker.

Speaking of small, I didn’t expect a lot of stereo separation from a speaker this small (although iHome says it’s stereo), and I didn’t get any separation.  Even though I didn’t get dizzy listening to the panning in the intro of Art Garfunkel’s I Only Have Eyes for You, the song still sounded good.

I think the iW3 would be a great speaker for your office, dorm room, or anywhere you want good sound from a small package.  With AirPlay, you won’t have to worry about keeping your device within 30 feet of the speaker, as you would with Bluetooth.  It has a rechargeable battery, so you could even take it with you on a picnic if you bring along the USB cable (or an audio cable).  You could fill your house with music for a party if you place several of these speakers in a few rooms.  It’s a bit more expensive than other iHome speakers I’ve tried, but not much more.  It seems like a good deal for people like me with a lot of iOS devices, and you won’t have to worry about a dock connector making your expensive speaker obsolete.

Product Information

Price:$199.99
Manufacturer:iHome
Retailer:iHome
Pros:
  • Great sound in a small package
  • No distortion even at very loud volumes
  • Sounds good at low volumes, too
  • Decent bass from a small speaker
  • AirPlay means you can use it anywhere your WiFi connection reaches
Cons:
  • Not ideal for bass-heavy music

Filed in categories: Audio, Video, TV Gear, iPhone, iPad, iPod, Reviews

Tagged: ,

iHome iW3 AirPlay Wireless Stereo Speaker System with Rechargeable Battery review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 8, 2013 at 11:00 am.

Catching up on Nintendo TVii: an interview with i.TV co-founder Justin Whittaker

Catching up on Nintendo TVii an interview with iTV cofounder Justin Whittaker

Nintendo TVii's road to reality was relatively pain-free until its platform, Wii U, launched in November ... without the promised TVii functionality ready for primetime. A month and many ambiguous company statements later, Nintendo TVii went live. But even then, the service went without two of its promised features: TiVo and Netflix integration, promised to launch later this month. Nintendo isn't saying much about TVii post-Wii U launch, but we did manage to catch up with the company that created (and continues to support) Nintendo TVii, i.TV, during this week's madness. I.TV co-founder Justin Whittaker stopped by the Engadget doublewide at CES 2013 to chat about his company, what happened (or rather, what didn't happen) at launch, and what the future holds for Nintendo TVii. Head past the break and find out!

Continue reading Catching up on Nintendo TVii: an interview with i.TV co-founder Justin Whittaker

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/09/catching-up-on-nintendo-tvii-an-interview-with-i-tv-co-founder/

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NVIDIA announces Project Shield, how does it compare to iOS and AirPlay?

Last night, during their CES 2013 press conference, graphics powerhouse NVIDIA announced their Project Shield gaming platform. It's running a close-to-stock version of Android, and will run Android apps. It's play Steam games (!!!). And you can play PC games using project shield as the controller.

Phil Nickinson from Android Central has already gone hands-on with Project Shield. The video is up top, and here's what he had to say:

It's hard not to get excited about NVIDIA's "Project Shield," the Android-based hand-held gaming system it unveiled this week at CES in Los Vegas. For one, it's really the biggest piece of news thus far. And for another -- it's just friggin' cool. NVIDIA has taken the traditional gaming-style controller, packed its brand-new Tegra 4 system inside of it, added a 5-inch, clamshell 720p display (NVIDIA's calling it "retinal") and added some truly astonishing gameplay.

Apple has the beaming stuff covered already with AirPlay, which lets anything on your iPhone and iPad stream video and apps to an Apple TV connected to a big-screen HDTV. Not everyone is thrilled with a flat piece of multitouch glass, even one with a gyro and accelerometer in it, as a controller.

We probably haven't heard the last of Apple's AirPlay and gaming plans, now that iOS 6 and Mountain Lion have begun converging their feature sets, but have we head enough yet to know where that future lies? What do you think of Project Shield as an alternative? Is it just a gimmick, a controller with a screen bolted on, that probably won't find appeal beyond a niche. Or will physical controls and the popularity of Steam and PC gaming be enough to make Project Shield a success?

Source: Android Central

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/WAUgcktT30Q/story01.htm

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Mitts on with the almighty Android oven

Android Oven

Android Central @ CES

Forget Tegra 4 and its its 72 GPUs. Forget NVIDIA's Project Shield handheld gaming console. Hell, forget Sony's beautiful 4K televisions and its also-impressive new Xperia Z smarpthone. No, this is what everyone's buzzing about here at CES in beautiful Las Vegas, where dreams are made, fortunes are won and lost.

The Android oven.

Yes. It's an oven. That you cook food in. And it's running Android. Not for the heat, mind you. That's silly. It's a relatively normal (if stylish) convection oven, just like mom uses to make your banana bread. (I've had your mom's banana bread, and it's great.) Only, yeah. This one's got an Android brain inside it that, well, runs Android. It'll run Android apps, yeah, but the real purpose for all this is that it'll walk you through the cooking process, and send you alerts when it's time to baste the turkey. That's pretty much what connected devices have done for the past year, but this one's making all the noise this week here in Vegas. So there.

We've got some video after the break for you Android-oven-loving fans out there. Namaste.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/sqMuJPygTS0/story01.htm

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VMware adds Mozy to its cloud and virtualization empire

mozy vmware
Mozy is one of the most popular cloud backup services around, with more than one million users storing around 70 petabytes of data. Its popularity apparently put it on the acquisition radar of VMware -- which has now made Mozy part of its virtualization empire.

VMware's official blog post makes it clear that the company wasn't so much interested in Mozy as a consumer offering. Rather, it's the inner workings of Mozy which piqued VMware's curiosity. CTO Steve Herrod says, "Over the past 5 years, Mozy has built one of the best examples of a globally distributed, large-scale cloud offering." He adds that the move will allow VMware to "further ramp our own cloud-related learning and accelerate new IP, scale, and capabilities" of its existing offerings.

Existing Mozy customers don't need to worry, of course. VMware has pledged to continue running Mozy's service without interruption.

VMware adds Mozy to its cloud and virtualization empire originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/05/vmware-takes-over-operation-of-mozy/

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Help Wanted – Become a member of the Gadgeteer team!

helpwantedFor anyone out there who has always wanted to be part of The Gadgeteer, now is your chance. I’m wanting to add 1-2 people to our rag tag team of gadget freaks. I would really like these 2 new people to be female to help offset the huge amount of testosterone that we currently have on the team… But don’t let that stop you from applying if you don’t fit that criteria. :) Think you have what it takes to become a regular Gadgeteer contributor? Full details after the jump.

What’s expected:

You will be responsible for submitting a minimum of 2 unique and original news stories (not just a rehash of other gadget news site’s posts) every week. These stories consist of 1 image and 1-2 short paragraphs talking about new, useful, wacky and unique products that other people will want to read about. They don’t always have to be consumer electronics, they could be almost anything interesting.

New team members will start out posting news. If everything works out, after a certain period of time you’ll be invited to do product reviews in addition to regular news posts.

Compensation:

This is not a paying job and you will not receive any monetary compensation for any of your contributions. Your “pay” will be a boost in geek cred and review samples if you end up becoming a full member of the team.

Requirements:

1. You must be a gadget freak. But you don’t have to be overly techy, geeky or a hardcore hacker. I just want people who are always excited about new products and are constantly scouring the web and elsewhere for interesting products and tidbits.

2. Must be able to write decent English and have a firm grasp on the fundamentals of grammar. We don’t have time to re-write your posts, so this is a must.

3. Must have above average photography skills and have the ability to take sharp well lighted close ups of the products being reviewed.

4. If you’ve tried out for a position before and didn’t get picked, don’t let that stop you from trying again :)

How to apply:

Send me an email telling me about yourself, what types of products that most interest you and why you think you would be a great addition to my team. I’ll use this info to decide who I will ask to provide a sample news post and a sample review which will show me your writing and photography skills. I will then choose the best candidates to go through a trial period posting news. After that trial period ends, I’ll decide who will become permanent team members.

I’m looking forward to hearing from you!

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Help Wanted – Become a member of the Gadgeteer team! originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 7, 2013 at 12:00 pm.

Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with MakerBot's Bre Pettis (update: video embedded)

Live from the Engadget CES Stage an interview with MakerBot's Bre Pettis

Yep, it's a big year from 3D printing, and no company's got a bigger piece of the spotlight than MakerBot. The company used last year's show to announce the release of the first generation Replicator, releasing its successor a few months back. We've asked the company's CEO Bre Pettis back to our stage to discuss the 3D printing revolution.

January 9, 2013 5:00 PM EST

Check out our full CES 2013 stage schedule here!

Update: video embedded

Continue reading Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with MakerBot's Bre Pettis (update: video embedded)

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/3ysNfHUOOng/

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