Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
AVG Technologies, developers of the world’s most popular free anti-virus
software, today revealed research into a very aggressive, expansive push
by rogue applications on Facebook this past weekend. AVG researchers
indicated that from midnight to 9 a.m. EST on Saturday, May 15, 2010,
AVG software detected and blocked more than three hundred thousand rogue
applications. That rate was more than three times the rate of the number
two for the day for rogue anti-spyware.
“This latest issue really underscores how powerful, while at the same
time vulnerable, social networking applications are. This attack was
actually stunning in terms of scale,” said Roger Thompson, AVG’s Chief
Research Officer. “Facebook is very responsive to threats when we
identify them, and removing these applications as soon as they find
them, but they’re still able to generate huge traffic, just because of
the viral nature of social networks. It is staggering how many threats
were propagated before they were stopped.”
Ironically, the attack, which offers a picture of a girl in a bikini to
entice the victim to install an adware-supported viewer, was not viral
according to AVG researchers, and was first seen in different forms last
week. AVG’s malware detection servers are set to alert the research team
when certain nefarious behaviors and activities are detected. By 9 a.m.
EST, AVG’s servers had detected more than 200,000 of this particular
threat. By comparison, the second highest detection at that same time
was about twenty-four thousand of a particular rogue anti-spy, so at one
point, this push was nearly ten times the number two detection.
Last week’s rogue push peaked at about 80,000 for the day, and had
dwindled to just a couple of hundred per day by Friday, May 14, 2010. At
that point AVG researchers were hopeful that the adware attack would
cease; however, all indications point to the fact that they were just
gearing up for a fresh start… and a powerful one at that.
Thompson added, “Interestingly, they launched it on a Saturday. I guess
they figure we don’t watch on the weekend, but malcode researchers are
all cut from the same cloth as Inspector Gadget… we’re always on duty.”
AVG recognizes the power that social networking brings to our
professional and personal lives and does not advocate giving up on the
technology altogether. However, AVG does have some recommendations on
how to best protect yourself:
1. Make sure you practice safe surfing. AVG LinkScanner is a free
web tool that can identify threats in real-time and let you know if
a page or link is poisoned, before you click.
2. If you ever have to install a viewer to watch a video, something is
probably not right. Go to the video player application’s official
website and download the application there. Never download through a
link.
3. Make sure your anti-virus and security software is up to date. If you
don’t have anti-virus software, you can download AVG
Free here.
AVG is a global security software maker protecting more than 110 million
consumers and small businesses in 170 countries from the ever-growing
incidence of web threats, viruses, spam, cyber-scams and hackers on the
Internet. AVG has nearly two decades of experience in combating cyber
crime and one of the most advanced laboratories for detecting,
pre-empting and combating Web-borne threats from around the world. Its
free, downloadable software allows novice users to have basic anti-virus
protection and then easily upgrade to greater levels of safety and
defense when they are ready. AVG has nearly 6,000 resellers, partners
and distributors globally including Amazon.com, CNET, Cisco, Ingram
Micro, Play.com, Wal-Mart, and Yahoo!