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Learn how to protect yourself from Internet hackers

May 3rd, 2011, 11:43 am by

By Jaclyn Hart / CBS 6 Intern

On average how many times a day would you say you go on the Internet? How many times does that include going online via the Wi-Fi connection from your smartphone? The dangers of using a Wi-Fi connection seem very miniscule but according to the Better Business Bureau, along with the Federal Trade Commission, the threat of using a non-secure Internet connection is something you should always be thinking about.

With many places making Wi-Fi available you may be using it without even realizing. Some popular places that provide a Wi-Fi connection are coffee shops, libraries, airports, hotels and universities. These places have created a breeding ground for hackers. These hackers are able to gain access to your login and password to personal things including your email, Facebook and iTunes; if you have a credit card linked to your iTunes they can gain access to that as well.

In order to protect yourself from Internet hackers and ensure that an Internet connection is secure follow these tips provided by BBB from the FTC:

  • Make sure the connection is protected by a unique password. If a Wi-Fi hotspot doesn’t ask for a password, the Internet connection is not secure.  If a hotspot asks for a password just to grant access, consumers should proceed as if the connection were unsecured. Only trust home and work internet connections that are protected by a customized user password. Wi-Fi hotspot connections with generic passwords are vulnerable to hackers.
  • Transmitted information should be encrypted. When sending personal information like addresses, credit card numbers and Social Security numbers over the Internet, make sure the website is fully encrypted and the network is secure. Look for https (the “s” stands for secure) at the beginning of the URL address to confirm its security.
  • Don’t stay permanently logged-in to wireless hotspots. Never leave your Internet connection running while your computer is unattended and make sure to log-off after every use.
  • Change your passwords frequently. When creating new accounts, make sure you use different passwords. Do not use the same password for different sites. If one password is hacked, the chances of other accounts being hacked becomes greater with repeated passwords.

Bin Laden story shows changing media nature

May 3rd, 2011, 10:16 am by

By DAVID BAUDER / AP Television Writer

NEW YORK CITY — A soldier in Afghanistan learned about the death of Osama bin Laden on Facebook. A TV producer in South Carolina got a tip from comedian Kathy Griffin on Twitter. A blues musician in Denver received an email alert from The New York Times. And a Kansas woman found out as she absently scrolled through the Internet on her smartphone while walking her dog.

In an illustration of how the information world has changed, many people learned through media formats or devices that weren’t available a decade ago that the mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks had been killed.

“It just kind of spread like wildfire online,” said Stephen Vujevica, a student at Immaculata University in Pennsylvania. “It’s amazing to see how social media played a part in it.”

Vujevica was at his girlfriend’s house and both were on their laptops, when she said that many of her friends had updated their Facebook status to note bin Laden’s death in Pakistan. He went to Google News to find out that President Barack Obama had scheduled an address to the nation. He searched other sites to get news and credited Twitter with giving him the most immediate information.

Jaime Aguilar, a Denver musician, was at a friend’s house watching HBO when he saw the news alert on his smartphone.

A soldier who identified himself only as Carlos from Queens called New York sports radio station WFAN Monday to note that he and his buddies in Afghanistan learned the news not from commanding officers, but from Facebook. Angie Scharnhorst of Overland Park, Kan., had an early morning plane flight and if she wasn’t carrying her smartphone while walking her dog Ruby at 2 a.m. CT, said she probably wouldn’t have heard the news until later in the day Monday.

Ashlee Edwards, a content producer for the CBS affiliate WBTW-TV in Myrtle Beach, S.C., was watching “The Tudors” with a friend when she saw Griffin’s tweet urging her to “turn on CNN now” because the president was about to make an announcement.

It was before 10 p.m. ET Sunday that many Washington-based reporters were told to get to work because the president would speak. They were not told why.

At 10:25, Keith Urbahn, the chief of staff for former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld tweeted: “So I’m told by a reputable person that they have killed Osama bin Laden. Hot damn.”

The word spread quickly, even as Urbahn subsequently tweeted that he “didn’t know if it’s true, but let’s pray it is.”

Mainstream news organizations began reporting that bin Laden was dead about 15 or 20 minutes later. Some, such as CNN and NBC, were tentative at first. Others, including ABC, were more definitive. Fox News Channel was joyful.

“This is the greatest night of my career,” said Fox’s Geraldo Rivera. “The bum is dead, the savage who hurt us so grievously. I am so blessed, so privileged to be at my desk at this moment.”

The speed of social media struck some as an epochal moment in news coverage. “If anyone isn’t a believer in Twitter as an amazingly powerful news vehicle, last night should convert you,” tweeted Chris Cillizza of the political website The Fix.

Twitter said that it saw its highest sustained rate of tweets. There was an average of 3,440 tweets-per-second from 10:45 p.m. – 12:30 a.m. EST, according to the site. At 11 p.m. EST, there were 5,106 tweets-per-second.

Parody outraced news. Even before CBS had reported bin Laden’s death, a tweet came from Eric Stangel, co-head writer on David Letterman’s “Late Show”: “Report: President Obama to announce Osama bin Laden is dead. I won’t believe it until I see the death certificate.”

Internet traffic surged above normal Sunday night usage. Akamail Technologies Inc., which delivers about 20 percent of the world’s Internet traffic, said that global page views for the roughly 100 news portals for which it delivers content peaked at more than 4.1 million page views around 11 p.m. ET. CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC had nearly 15 million viewers between 11 p.m. and midnight Sunday when Obama spoke, led by CNN’s 7.8 million. That time on a typical Sunday, the three networks are pulling in 1.7 million viewers, according to the Nielsen Co.

At CNN, which reported at 10 p.m. that Obama would speak, it was another 45 minutes until the speech was connected to bin Laden, even as Wolf Blitzer provided some cryptic teases: “I have my suspicion on what the president is going to announce. Probably something we’ve been looking forward to, at least from a U.S. perspective, for quite a while.” CNN’s John King eventually reported the news.

Blitzer conceded Monday that he had a pretty good idea what the news would be when sources assured him that the president’s news was not about Libya.

“I didn’t report it because you don’t report something like that based on a suspicion, based on a hunch, based on your journalistic gut instinct,” Blitzer said. “You’ve got to get confirmation. And you can’t just confirm from one source. You need at least two really excellent sources.”

It’s no longer unusual these days for social media to reflect the first stirrings of a story, said Mark Kraham, chairman of the Radio Television Digital News Association and news director for WHAG-TV in Hagerstown, Md. Yet Kraham said that conventional media showed care and proper caution in reporting the story through. People would have been offended or hurt if news organizations had reported a story of this magnitude and it turned out to be false, he said.

If social media outlets were quick on the story, many posts were quick to point followers to mainstream news organizations, or to pass on links – such as Griffin’s advice to turn on CNN.

Even Urbahn put the brake lights on a rapidly spreading trend: “Stories about ‘the death of (mainstream media)’ because of my first ‘tweet’ are greatly exaggerated,” he tweeted on Monday.

The Newseum, the Washington-based museum devoted to journalism, saw its website crash on Monday because of the crush of people who went to the site to see digital replicas of the front pages from newspapers around the world, a service it has offered since 2002. The site was processing more than 2,800 requests per seconds when it crashed, said Paul Sparrow, senior vice president for broadcasting.

In New York, where nearly 3,000 people died at the World Trade Center, some of those front pages were blunt: “Rot in Hell” was the message on the New York Daily News front page. “U.S. nails the bastard,” the New York Post said on its cover.

Broadcast networks readied special reports on Monday, expanding their evening news broadcasts to an hour to cover the story.

ABC News touted exclusive video of the blood-soaked scene at bin Laden’s compound, obtained through a Pakistani-based producer for the network; ABC would not say how the producer got the footage. On Sunday night, the network had to backtrack from an initial Brian Ross report that bin Laden had been killed several days earlier along with about two dozen other al-Qaida operatives.

Ten years ago Aaron Brown worked all day at CNN, broadcasting from a rooftop with the smoke from the World Trade Center in the background. Many Americans got the terrible news from him that day; now he typifies how news delivery is changing in explaining how he first heard bin Laden was dead.

“I was at dinner here and my phone beeped,” said Brown, who now teaches journalism at Arizona State University in Phoenix.

RIM announces new BlackBerry Bold

May 2nd, 2011, 1:53 pm by

PETER SVENSSON / AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK CITY — Research In Motion is releasing a new version of one of its high-end BlackBerrys, updating the Bold with a touch screen and fresh software.

T-Mobile USA says it will carry the BlackBerry Bold 9900 later this year.

Research in Motion Ltd. is under pressure to update its high-end phones as it’s losing out to iPhones and phones running Google Inc.’s Android software. Last week, the company cut its earnings and sales forecasts for the current quarter, saying it’s selling fewer and cheaper phones than expected. Its stock plummeted.

Like the original Bold, launched in 2008, the 9900 has a keyboard under a 2.8-inch-screen in landscape orientation. It’s thinner than before, at just 10.5 millimeters, making it the thinnest BlackBerry yet.

Man unknowingly liveblogs Bin Laden operation

May 2nd, 2011, 1:51 pm by

By DIAA HADID / Associated Press

CAIRO (AP) — A computer programmer, startled by a helicopter clattering above his quiet Pakistani town in the early hours of the morning Monday, did what any social-media addict would do: he began sending messages to the social networking site Twitter.

With his tweets, 33-year-old Sohaib Athar, who moved to the sleepy town of Abbottabad to escape the big city, became in his own words “the guy who liveblogged the Osama raid without knowing it.”

Soon the sole helicopter multiplied into several and gunfire and explosions rocked the air above the town, and Athar’s tweets quickly garnered 14,000 followers as he apparently became the first in the world to describe the U.S. operation to kill one of the world’s most wanted militants.

His first tweet was innocuous: “Helicopter hovering above Abbottabad at 1AM (is a rare event).”

The noise alarmed Athar, who had moved to the upscale area of Abbottabad to get away from city life after his wife and child were badly injured in a car accident in the sprawling city of Lahore, according to his blog in July.

Nestled in the mountains around 60 miles (95 kilometers) northeast of the capital, Abbottabad is a quiet, leafy town featuring a military academy, the barracks for three army regiments and even its own golf course.

As the operation to kill Osama Bin Laden unfolded, Athar “liveblogged” what he was hearing in real time, describing windows rattling as bombs exploded.

He questioned whose helicopters might be flying overhead. “The few people online at this time of the night are saying one of the copters was not Pakistani,” he tweeted.

Athar then said one of the aircraft appeared to have been shot down. Two more helicopters rushed in, he reported.

Throughout the battle, he related the rumors swirling through town: it was a training accident. Somebody was killed. The aircraft might be a drone. The army was conducting door-to-door searches in the surrounding area. The sound of an airplane could be heard overhead.

Athar did not respond to media requests for comment – he explained in another tweet that a filter he set up to stop his e-mail box from flooding could be culling out requests for interviews.

Soon, however, the rumbling of international events far beyond the confines of this quiet upscale suburb began to dawn on Athar, and he realized what he might be witnessing.

“I think the helicopter crash in Abbottabad, Pakistan and the President Obama breaking news address are connected,” he tweeted.

Eight hours and about 35 tweets later, the confirmation came: “Osama Bin Laden killed in Abbottabad, Pakistan,” Athar reported. “There goes the neighborhood.”

Tweets, Facebook welcome in Mass. courtroom

May 2nd, 2011, 9:15 am by

By DENISE LAVOIE / AP Legal Affairs Writer

BOSTON — When the camera switches on in one of the busiest courtrooms in Massachusetts, murder arraignments, traffic and drug cases heard there will become fodder for a new experiment: how bloggers and other citizen journalists can cover courts using new media and social media.

Starting Monday, most of what happens in a bustling courtroom in Quincy District Court will be streamed live over the Web for anyone to see. The courtroom, which usually does not allow reporters to use even computers, will now welcome laptops, iPads and smartphones, and will encourage live blogging, Tweeting and Facebooking.

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Comcast offers video on demand from 4 broadcasters

April 28th, 2011, 2:04 pm by

NEW YORK CITY — The nation’s biggest cable television provider is making prime-time shows available on demand from the four biggest broadcasters starting on Thursday.

Comcast Corp. said ABC and Fox have agreed to join its on demand lineup, joining CBS and NBC. The company, which provides services to nearly one-fifth of the nation’s homes with TV, is the first provider to have all four networks participate. It has seen an explosion in video on demand usage — another indication of how the television experience is changing.

Most of these programs are available to order for free the day after they air on the networks’ regular schedules, although Fox’s “House,” for instance, requires an eight-day wait.

Comcast says some popular shows, like “American Idol” and “Modern Family,” are not available due to ownership issues.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

Sony says stolen PlayStation credit data encrypted

April 28th, 2011, 10:22 am by

NEW YORK (AP) — Sony is telling PlayStation users that it had encrypted the credit card data that hackers may have stolen, reducing the chances that thieves could have used the information.

Sony Corp. says that while it had no direct evidence the data were even taken, it cannot rule out the possibility. It did not say how strong the encryption was, and it’s possible for hackers to decipher files that are weakly encrypted.

On Tuesday, Sony said account information, including names, birthdates, email addresses and log-in information, was compromised for certain players using its PlayStation Network. In a blog post Wednesday, Sony said that data had not been encrypted and had been kept in a separate location from the credit card information.

Friendster evolves to escape Facebook’s shadow

April 28th, 2011, 10:21 am by

By SEAN YOONG / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Faded social networking site Friendster will soon delete nearly a decade’s worth of user photos, blog entries and other data in a revamp to set it apart from Facebook, a company official said Thursday.

The overhaul is meant to help Friendster regain a semblance of online relevance after being outmuscled by Facebook, which boasts about 600 million active users. Friendster has accumulated at least 115 million registered members since 2002, but only about 40 million currently have valid emails and fewer still are active users.

Friendster emailed its members over the past week to inform them to save their pictures, profile information, messages and blog posts on other sites by May 31, said Nor Badron, a company spokesman based in Singapore.

“This is an evolution of the site to push the boundaries of our business,” Nor told The Associated Press. “It’s not about direct competition with Facebook. Whoever wants to compete with Facebook would be crazy.”

It is the biggest change to Friendster since Malaysian tycoon Vincent Tan’s online payment systems company MOL Global purchased the site in late 2009. Tan’s businesses include retail franchises in Southeast Asia such as Starbucks and 7-Eleven.

In June, Friendster will launch services that are not provided by Facebook, focusing on a new platform for social interaction in gaming, music, entertainment and online shopping, Nor said.

Friendster members can have a different social networking experience by cultivating unique online identities that are different from their real-life ones, Nor said. They can connect with people whom they don’t personally know and share music with them or play online games together.

“We realize there’s no need to have photo albums or the duplication of status updates on both Facebook and Friendster, so this is something totally different, a whole new ball game,” Nor said. “It’s about something you don’t do on Facebook that you can do on Friendster.”

Nor declined to say how much Friendster is investing in the changes or give details about its financial targets.

The biggest number of Friendster users are now in the Philippines, the United States, Malaysia, Indonesia and Britain.

Apple: IPhone not tracking users, will get update

April 28th, 2011, 10:19 am by

By PETER SVENSSON / AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Apple denied that the iPhone has a privacy problem Wednesday – and then promised to fix it. It took the technology giant a week to respond to a brouhaha over how the devices log their owners’ movements.

Privacy concerns erupted last week when security researchers said a file found on PCs linked to iPhones allowed them to create maps of the phones’ movements for up to a year. Combined with similar questions about Google’s Android smartphone software, the news left privacy-conscious smartphone users wondering how much information they were unknowingly giving up.

Apple denied claims that it was keeping tabs on its customers, saying the file records Wi-Fi hot spots and cell towers in the general area of iPhones, not the whereabouts of their users.

The company implied that the privacy concerns raised by that file were partly based on a misunderstanding. But it also said that a software error was the reason the files are storing up to a year’s worth of information, and that it would fix that issue and others in a few weeks.

“Users are confused, partly because creators of this new technology (including Apple) have not provided enough education about these issues to date,” Apple said in its first comprehensive response to the allegations. It had revealed the nature of the location file in a letter to Congress last summer following an earlier round of questions about its location-tracking practices.

The data help the phone figure out its location, Apple said. They allow the phone to listen for signals from hot spots and cell towers, which are much stronger than signals from GPS satellites. Wi-Fi signals don’t reach very far, which means that if a phone picks up a signal it recognizes, it can deduce that it’s close to that hot spot.

Taken together, this means navigation applications can present the phone’s location faster and more accurately than if the phone relied on GPS alone, Apple said.

However, it’s still not clear why the files are so detailed that they allow the reconstruction of the phone’s movements.

In its 10-point question-and-answer statement, Apple didn’t address why the files contain “timestamps” that link a phone to certain hot spots and cell towers at a certain time. Those timestamps are what allowed the researchers Alasdair Allan and Pete Warden to construct animated maps of a phone’s movements over a year.

Warden said that as far as he could tell, Apple could have used the location data productively without storing timestamps. He said he’s pleased the company is applying software fixes to safeguard the data.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington-based privacy rights group, commended the company for quickly making significant changes to the iPhone operating system.

But Larry L. Smith, the president of the Institute for Crisis Management, a public relations company, said Apple should have responded to concerns last week even if it didn’t have all the answers ready.

Questions such as “Is Apple tracking my iPhone’s location?” are not entirely unexpected, and Apple should have had some standby statements ready to go, Smith said.

Apple’s reaction is reminiscent of its response last summer, when Consumer Reports and others reported that the iPhone 4 suffered from signal loss when held a certain way.

Apple stayed quiet for a week after the launch of the phone, then denied there was a hardware problem but said it would fix how the iPhone displayed its signal bars. Two weeks later, it offered free protective cases that insulated the antenna, mitigating the signal loss. It still denied the design was flawed. The phone’s appeal stayed intact.

Apple is not the only technology company addressing allegations that it’s tracking customers. Google Inc. acknowledged last week that phones running its Android software store some location data directly on phones for a short time from users who have chosen to use GPS services. Google said that was done “to provide a better mobile experience on Android devices.”

Apple said iPhone data are stored for up to a year because of a software error. The company said there’s no need to store data for more than seven days, and a software update in the next few weeks will limit the size of the file.

The iPhone will also stop backing up the file to the user’s computer, a practice that raised some concerns. Computers are much more vulnerable to remote hacking attempts than are phones.

A third planned fix is to encrypt the file, and to stop downloading the data completely to phones that have all “Location Services” turned off, Apple said.

Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on privacy, technology and the law, said he still has questions about why Apple didn’t tell users what it was doing.

“This has raised larger questions of how the locations of mobile devices are tracked and shared by companies like Apple and Google, and whether federal laws provide adequate protection as technology has advanced,” Franken said Wednesday. He plans a hearing on cellphones and privacy next month.

The way an iPhone stores its own location appears to be at most a minor privacy threat. A snoop would need access to the victim’s phone or PC, both of which usually store lots of other personal information. Phones contain texts, emails and lists of phone calls. PCs contain such information as tax returns, logs of websites visited and passwords.

There’s a separate issue of smartphones like the iPhone transmitting their location wirelessly to corporate servers. In Wednesday’s statement, Apple reiterated that iPhones regularly send their location to Apple, but do so anonymously, so the company isn’t able to track users.

IPhones can also transmit a user’s location to companies that run applications with location-based services, with the user’s consent. Companies that buy ads through Apple’s iAds advertising system can also locate users, but only ones that specifically approve of a location request from a particular ad.

Apple shares fell 27 cents to $350.15 on Wednesday.

Apple says white iPhone to arrive Thursday

April 28th, 2011, 9:57 am by

CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) — Apple says the long-delayed white iPhone 4 will go on sale Thursday in the United States, United Kingdom and 26 other countries for $199 or $299 depending on the model.

Apple Inc. said Wednesday the prices are for phones purchased with a two-year contract from AT&T Inc. or Verizon Wireless in the U.S.

The black iPhone 4 went on sale last June. Apple had hoped to make the white phones available in July, then in late 2010. But it has said that the gadget was more challenging to produce than expected. In October, Apple said the white phones would be available in the spring.

Separately, Apple says the iPad 2 will go on sale in Japan on Thursday and in Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore and eight more countries on Friday.

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