Australian Web Data Consumption Doubles

Australian internet users now consume twice as much data than they did a year ago, but figures by Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) reveal there are still over 200,000 businesses and government agencies on a dial-up connection. Last June, over a three-month period, Australia downloaded around 55.4 terabytes (TB). This year the figure almost doubled to 99.9TB as more subscribers ditched dial-up for faster ADSL-style fixed line connections or wireless broadband

Internet Firms Help Canadian Courts ID Authors of Controversial Email

Think you can be anonymous online? Most people simply have no idea how easy it is for law enforcement officials — and other litigants, like someone suing you — to gain access to personal email, Google searches, and other online information users think is theirs. The latest ominous evidence of this fact comes from our friends to the north. A Canadian court has ordered Google to turn over the identities of anonymous Gmail users who had accused York University faculty members of fraud and dishonesty. Like similar cases in the US, the York incident shows just how easy it is for courts to allow authorities to gain access to our personal information

Linux Webserver Botnet Pushes Malware

A security researcher has discovered a cluster of infected Linux servers that have been corralled into a special ops botnet of sorts and used to distribute malware to unwitting people browsing the web. Each of the infected machines examined so far is a dedicated or virtual dedicated server running a legitimate web site. But in addition to running an Apache webserver to dish up benign content, they’ve also been hacked to run a second webserver known as nginx, which serves malware

Trojan Hides Its Brain in Google Groups

Virus writers keep getting sneakier. In an effort to evade detection, they’ve begun hiding their command and control instructions in legitimate Web 2.0 sites such as Google Groups and Twitter. Recently, security vendor Symantec spotted a Trojan horse program that’s been programmed to visit a private Google Groups newsgroup, called escape2sun, where it can download encrypted instructions or even software updates

Chinese eBay Rival Aims for 1 Billion Global Users

The company known as China’s eBay will aim for expansion abroad in the long term, but first it wants more foreign products sold on its platform in China. Taobao.com, a booming auction and retail site, does not have a concrete plan for the overseas market but will likely target regions with cultural similarities to China first. Alibaba Group, Taobao’s parent company, wants 1 billion global users shopping on the site in 10 years, group CEO Jack Ma earlier told reporters. The target, more than one-seventh of the world’s population, compares with Taobao’s current average of up to 25 million shoppers each day

Treatment of Alan Turing was Appalling

The Prime Minister has released a statement on the Second World War code-breaker, Alan Turing, recognising the appalling way he was treated for being gay. Alan Turing, a mathematician most famous for his work on breaking the German Enigma codes, was convicted of gross indecency in 1952 and sentenced to chemical castration. Gordon Brown’s statement came in response to a petition posted on the Number 10 web site which has received thousands of signatures in recent months

Vast Malware Repository Dedicated to Testing and Research

Frame4 Group is a Dutch company that has made its name specialising in different fields within IT: project and change management, process engineering, test coordination and quality assurance. Their customers include T-Mobile and British American Tobacco. But it’s because of their security services that they came to Help Net Security’s attention, specifically because of the Malware Distribution Project (MD:Pro). This is a large security archive with a massive collection of downloadable malware and computer underground related information for the purposes of analysis, testing, research and development

Quantum Device Stores Pulses of Light

Australian researchers have demonstrated a way of storing quantum pulses of light that could be used in an optical memory device, similar to the way computers store and retrieve digital information. The technology, developed by a team at the Australian National University (ANU), in Canberra, also has applications in quantum cryptography, a secure means of communication that utilises properties of light to encrypt information. Cryptography works if the information sender and receiver share a secret key

Pigeon Transfers Data Faster Than South Africa’s Telkom

A South African information technology company proved it was faster for them to transmit data with a carrier pigeon than to send it using Telkom, the country’s leading internet service provider. Internet speed and connectivity in Africa’s largest economy are poor because of a bandwidth shortage. It is also expensive. Local news agency SAPA reported the 11-month-old pigeon, Winston, took one hour and eight minutes to fly the 80 km from Unlimited IT’s offices near Pietermaritzburg to the coastal city of Durban with a data card was strapped to his leg. Including downloading, the transfer took two hours, six minutes and 57 seconds — the time it took for only four percent of the data to be transferred using a Telkom line. SAPA said Unlimited IT performed the stunt after becoming frustrated with slow internet transmission times

Prime Minister’s Web Site Hacked

Hackers temporarily shut down Kevin Rudd’s web site last night in an apparent protest at federal government proposals for a mandatory internet filtering system. The web site of the Australian Communications and Media Authority was also taken down by the attack at about 7.20pm, but both sites were reported to be back online an hour later. There was also an apparent attempt to shut down the website of Communications Minister Stephen Conroy

Google Bows to EU Over Digital Books

Google will make concessions to European publishers and authors in an attempt to stem rising anger over its move to digitise and sell millions of books online. The company has agreed to have two non-US representatives on the board of a body that will administer a US legal settlement over the controversial online project, the Financial Times said. The newspaper cited a letter sent to 16 European Union publishers’ representatives at the weekend. According to the letter, Google also promises to consult European publishers before cataloguing some European works in its digital library

Telstra Outage Causes Outrage

A Bigpond internet outage that affected a suburban neighbourhood in southern Perth for almost a week has raised questions about Telstra’s customer complaint handling systems. Residents from Safety Bay, Rockingham, have complained that their BigPond ADSL broadband connection suffered an outage from 29 August until the night of 3 September. The outage, which one resident said Telstra confirmed to have affected 57 households in the neighbourhood, occurred after a hardware failure in the local exchange. Instead of notifying customers that the outage would last several days while a replacement part was flown in from the east coast, the telco left customers scratching their heads