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Saturday, March 5, 2011

South Korean websites come under further attack

SEOUL, South Korea – Unidentified attackers targeted more than two dozen South Korean government and private websites Saturday, a day after two waves of similar attacks, but officials reported no serious damage.
A total of 29 websites were hit Saturday in so-called "denial of service" attacks, in which large numbers of "zombie" computers try to connect to a site at the same time in an attempt to overwhelm the server, the Korea Communications Commission said.
Commission official Lee Sang-kug said the attacks were "so weak that no actual damage was detected so far." Lee said the commission would keep a close watch on the situation in coming days, but that the fallout was likely to remain limited because the government and computer security companies were well prepared.
Saturday's attacks on sites including South Korea's presidential office, the Foreign Ministry, the Defense Ministry, some financial institutions and U.S. Forces Korea followed two rounds Friday in which damage was also limited.
Lee said that 40 websites were originally targeted Friday, though only 29 came under actual attack. A total of 29 were targeted Saturday, he said.
The National Police Agency said the attacks originated from 30 servers in 18 foreign countries or territories including the United States, Israel, Russia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, Japan, India, Brazil and Iran.
"We may find more servers behind this attack as it is only the beginning of the investigation," said Jung Suk-hwa, head of the agency's Cyber Terror Response Center. "Generally, there is someone else who controls all of these servers and we are working to figure out who it is."
In 2009, some government websites in South Korea and the U.S. were paralyzed by a similar type of attack that South Korean officials believed was conducted by North Korea. But U.S. officials have largely ruled out North Korea as the origin, according to cybersecurity experts.
South Korean media have previously reported that North Korea runs an Internet warfare unit aimed at hacking into U.S. and South Korean military networks to gather information and disrupt service.
Park Kun-woo, a spokesman for South Korean computer security company AhnLab, said Friday that China is also pointed to as a source of cyberattacks because a large amount of malware, or malicious software, originates from there.

Courtesy Yahoo News 

Friday, March 4, 2011

Yahoo, We7, IAB Team For Experimental ‘Cloud Radio’

The Technology Strategy Board, a UK government-funded exploratory digital helper agency, is giving £1.8 million to a new consortium comprising Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), BT (NYSE: BT), the Internet Advertising Bureau and digital agency Somethin’ Else, to develop a “cloud radio” service codenamed “Apollo”.
“The partners will build prototypes for the cloud radio project, with a view to developing a working product by next year,” says the announcement.“The focus for Apollo will be to develop next-generation personal radio and music services that can work across any internet-connected device, such as mobiles, tablets and web TVs. Potential plans could include using Facebook’s API to tap into data and creating hybrid services that combine personalised music and audio information.”
We 7 appears to be a lead partner and could be a gainer. The unlimited-music service repositioned in November to place more emphasis on “radio”, having concluded that consumers prefer hearing unprogrammed streams of relevant music than picking from a neverending catalogue of available tunes. Apollo would seem to be an enlargening of that idea.
We 7 was also already allied with Yahoo, which it last year tapped to handle its ad sales around its music streams.
Somethin’ Else digital director Paul Bennum: “Wouldn’t it be useful to get traffic updates on your car radio saying the roundabout up ahead is blocked? With location sensitivity, we’ll be able to editorialise audio content that would help you know that.”
While many media are now being reborn as TCP/IP carriers and although in-home radio over WiFi is emminently possible, out-of-home internet radio whilst on the move is a significant challenge.