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  23. september 2006


Betting the House and Losing Big. Amaranth Advisors pledges to regain investors’ trust after suffering $6 billion in natural gas trading losses. By JENNY ANDERSON. [NYT > Business]
3:28:48 PM    comment []

Click Fraud Is Growing on the Web. Pay-per-click advertising fraud is becoming more pervasive as spurious clicks can be generated through automated programs. By KAREN J. BANNAN. [NYT > Business]
3:27:06 PM    comment []

Wal-Mart says not trying to fight movie downloads (Reuters).

Reuters - Wal-Mart Stores Inc. disputed a report on Friday saying it was trying to dissuade movie studios from working with other forms of distribution, such as Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes.


[Yahoo! News: Technology News]
3:25:41 PM    comment []

Belgium court rejects Google appeal (AP).

 [Yahoo! News: Technology News]


3:23:44 PM    comment []

HP's Hurd confirms probe OK, Dunn resigns.

(InfoWorld) - Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and President Mark Hurd confirmed on Friday that he approved a probe of HP employees, board members and journalists in an effort to find out who on the HP board was leaking confidential information outside of the company.

However, Hurd said he did not approve the placement of tracing technology in an e-mail to a journalist, and apologized for this and any other "inappropriate" tactics -- such as physical surveillance and obtaining phone records under false pretenses, known as "pretexting" -- that HP undertook in its investigation to find the source of information leaks.

"I extend my sincere apology to those journalists who were investigated and to everyone who was impacted," Hurd said. "The inappropriate techniques that were applied do not reflect the value of HP. ... These are not indicative of how we conduct business at HP."

Hurd also said he accepted the resignation of Patricia Dunn from her position as chairman of the HP board and a director, effective immediately, and thanked her for her eight years of service on HP's board. Previously, Dunn was to stay on as a director of the board, but would step down as chairman in January. Hurd now takes on the role of chairman of HP's board.

HP also appointed Bart M. Schwartz, a former U.S. prosecutor, as board counsel. His role will be to perform an independent review of investigative methods and the company's Standards of Business Conduct processes, and to make future recommendations for implementing best practices. He will report to Hurd and HP Chief Financial Officer Bob Wayman.

Hurd said that HP had the "best intentions" when it began the first of two phases of a probe into boardroom leaks, but said it "turned in a direction we could not have anticipated" and he takes full accountability for what transpired.

"I take this very seriously and commit to getting to the bottom of this," he said. "Our job is to fix this and get back to the job of running the business."

Hurd did not field reporter questions at the press conference, at which HP searched attendees' bags and did not allow video cameras. Hurd plans to appear at an U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations hearing about HP's investigation on Thursday, Sept. 28., and said he did not want questions on Friday to interfere with that testimony.

Mike Holston, a partner with law firm Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, also spoke at the press conference on Friday. HP appointed the firm, which reports directly to Hurd, on Sept. 8 to investigate the tactics used by HP and third-party investigators in its probe.

Holston said his firm has read more than 1 million pages of documents about two internal HP investigations -- called Kona 1 and Kona 2 -- and is still in the process of putting together the details of what took place. He declined to identify by name the people HP investigated.

However, Holston did confirm that HP worked with two third-party organizations -- Security Outsourcing Services and Action Research Group -- to investigate employees, board members and/or former board members and their families, and journalists and their families. That investigation included physical surveillance, obtaining social security numbers of those being investigated to obtain phone records and the placement of e-mail tracing technology in an e-mail to one journalist, he said.

Friday's news conference followed a steady stream of news reports over the last two weeks with revelations of actions HP and its outside investigators allegedly took to discover the source of company leaks to the media.

Schemes allegedly considered included an attempt to plant spies inside the San Francisco newsrooms of The Wall Street Journal and CNET Networks Inc. posing as clerical workers or janitors, and a sting operation in which a fake anonymous source within HP would e-mail CNET reporter Dawn Kamamoto with a tip and track her e-mails to see if she contacted her other HP sources about the tip.

Holston said on Friday that while there was evidence that HP considered starting undercover operations in the newsrooms of the Journal and CNET, there is no evidence that such operations ever took place.

He also confirmed that HP did try to track one reporter's e-mail through tracing technology, but did not name the reporter involved and said there was no evidence at this time that the HP investigation team was aware that the tracer was activated.

Hurd's explanation helps distance him from the allegations of wrongdoing, but many questions remain, said Rob Enderle, principal analyst with the Enderle Group, of San Jose, California.

"I think it is allowing [HP] to separate Hurd from the process and make it more clear what Hurd's role was or wasn't," said Enderle. "But, the way this [investigation] is ongoing you don't know if that is always going to be the case."

Enderle echoed Hurd's comments that the use of pretexting and surreptitious spying on people is not consistent with HP's way of doing business and that, as Hurd put it, they "were isolated incidents of impropriety."

"HP is one of the most conservative companies on the planet. I can't in my mind picture them approving this stuff if they knew exactly what it was they were approving," Enderle said.

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By Marc_Ferranti@idg.com (Marc Ferranti). [InfoWorld: Top News]
3:20:51 PM    comment []

Update: New security group patches VML bug.

(InfoWorld) - Microsoft Corp. may be waiting until next month to patch a nasty bug in Outlook and Internet Explorer, but security researchers are offering users a more immediate option.

A loose affiliation of security researchers going by the name of ZERT (Zeroday Emergency Response Team) has released a patch for the VML (Vector Markup Language) vulnerability, which increasingly is being exploited by criminals in malware attacks.

Microsoft is scheduled to fix the bug on Oct. 10, the date it has set to release its monthly batch of security updates, but the company is under increasing pressure to release an earlier, "out-of-cycle" patch. On Friday the SANS Internet Storm Center raised its alert level from green to yellow, an indication that attacks are becoming more widespread.

Microsoft has suggested a number of work-arounds to the problem, and the software vendor does not recommend that users install the ZERT patch, released Friday.

"We think it’s great that there are people out there working to help protect our customers. But as we've always said, we cannot endorse third party updates," wrote Microsoft Security Response center operations manager Scott Deacon in a blog posting Friday.

Microsoft's suggested work-around can be found here.

Microsoft rigorously tests its patches to try to cut off any problems that the new software might introduce. The ZERT patch has not been widely tested and could introduce new problems when installed, security experts warn.

ZERT plans to continue to release its own patches when particularly critical unpatched flaws begin to pose a "serious risk to the public, the infrastructure of the Internet or both," the group claims in a manifesto, published on its Web site.

"The purpose of ZERT is not to 'crack' products, but rather to 'uncrack' them by averting security vulnerabilities in them before they can be widely exploited," the group says.

ZERT sprang out of discussions on e-mail lists set up a few years ago by security researcher Gadi Evron, said ZERT member Randy Abrams, director of technical education with Eset LLC in San Diego.

"Microsoft wants to assign a monthly patch and we understand that," said ZERT member Roger Thompson, who is chief technology officer with Atlanta's Exploit Prevention Labs Inc. "There's a certain benefit of staying on the monthly patch, but when things start to pop, as we think this VML thing is, there's a need to do something."

The group's formation was spurred by Microsoft's WMF (Windows Metafile) vulnerability, which emerged in late 2005. Tens of thousands of Microsoft users downloaded third-party patches to fix that bug and Microsoft was eventually forced to release an out-of-cycle patch to address the problem.

"This has been the first real vulnerability [since then] that the members have felt can be patched fairly quickly," Abrams said.

Microsoft clearly does not want its users to get into the habit of installing third-party security patches, so if the ZERT software is widely downloaded, Microsoft may move more quickly with its own VML patch, Abrams said.

"It might force Microsoft's hand on an out-of-cycle patch," he said.

Microsoft's Deacon said that his team has still not seen "widespread" exploitation of the VML bug, but he implied that Microsoft could do an early patch release, if necessary.

"We’ve become more confident in the past couple of days in our ability to do an out-of-band release," he wrote Friday, in an update to his blog posting.

By Robert_McMillan@idg.com (Robert McMillan). [InfoWorld: Top News]
3:19:12 PM    comment []

North Korea 'makes weapon pledge'. North Korea has reportedly said it plans to extract more plutonium for use in nuclear weapons. [BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition]
3:16:43 PM    comment []

Time running out for Darfur - US. The US says Sudan is failing in its responsibility to protect its own citizens in Darfur and warns time is running out. [BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition]
3:15:25 PM    comment []

Ryder Cup live - Europe 7.5-3.5 USA. Lee Westwood and Darren Clarke extend Europe's Ryder Cup lead in the fourballs. [BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition]
3:14:12 PM    comment []

Many dead in Baghdad attack. At least 31 people, most of them women queuing for cooking fuel, die in a bomb attack in Sadr City, Baghdad. [BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition]
3:12:31 PM    comment []

Denmark want to sell SAS(Scandinavian Airlines System)!


3:04:08 PM    comment []

Embassies not informed of terror threats!


3:00:17 PM    comment []


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