Tag Archive for HP

Blackhole Crimeware

Malware Dark Reading reports that attackers are increasingly using the Blackhole exploit kit in phishing campaigns. The latest phishing scam poses as an email notification from an HP (HPQ) OfficeJet Printer has sent around 36,000 per minute resulting in nearly 8 million emails thus far and uses 2,000 domains to serve up the malware.

BotnetResearchers at AppRiver told Dark Reading the trend demonstrates how Blackhole is following the pattern of popular crimeware kit Zeus and SpyEye. Blackhole traditionally has been used to infect legitimate websites for drive-by infection purposes. “This attack is unique because Blackhole added an email vector to its format and is flooding the Internet with similar methods used by Zeus, SpyEye, and others, essentially moving it into prime time,” says Fred Touchette, senior security analyst for AppRiver.

Blackhole, which previously had been marketed as a high-end crimeware tool, costing $1,500 for a one-year license, in May was unleashed for free in some underground forums. That has propelled more use of the toolkit according to the AppRiver blog.

AppriverMr. Touchette said that attackers using Blackhole have changed tactics,”This is the first that I have personally noticed that leads email recipients to Blackhole websites. Before that, people using the Blackhole Kit relied on techniques such as SEO poisoning to lead victims to their sites,” he says.

The OfficeJet email campaign, like other Blackhole attacks, is trolling for victims’ online banking credentials according to Dark Reading. It works a lot like Zeus and others, using browser vulnerabilities on victims’ machines and creating a backdoor for downloading and installing the Trojans. AppRiver’s Touchette says Blackhole appears to favor Sun Oracle (ORCL) Java (I wrote about Java holes here) and Adobe (ADBE) bugs (I wrote about Adobe bugs here).

HP“This most recent campaign is still trickling in, but will soon stall as most of its domains have been picked up and blacklisted by security professionals … we were seeing malicious emails related to this campaign coming in at a rate of around 36,000 per minute,” Mr. Touchette says.

Recent botnet takedowns have spurred an increase in malware attacks recently as botnet operators try to rebuild, AppRiver’s Touchette told Dark Reading.

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Yeap- We are still seeing these trickling in and still have users reporting they cant access their OfficeJet .

25 Tech Firms Sued for Breaching 3G Patents

patent trollTechEye points out a case started by Golden Bridge Technology (GBT) which lists 25 tech firms alleged to breach a number of 3G patents.  In the case Golden Bridge Technology (1:11-cv-00165-SLR, U.S. District Court District of Delaware)  GBT alleges the companies have breached patents 6,574,267 B1, and 7,359,427 on standards for 3G wireless communications including devices and base stations. The defendants, the filing says, have refused to license the patents.

GBT said its developments were adopted by 3GPP “as an important and necessary part of the 3G and UMTS standards.” GBT is seeking damages from the defendants’ alleged past and present infringement. All of the defendants, in one way or another, use GBT’s technology, it alleges. GBT is seeking damages from the defendants’ alleged past and present infringement.

The defendants in the case are:

  1. Amazon (AMZN),
  2. Acer,
  3. Barnes & Noble (BKS),
  4. Deutsche Telekom,
  5. Dell (DELL),
  6. Exedea,
  7. Garmin (GRMN),
  8. Hewlett Packard (HPQ),
  9. HTC,
  10. Huawei,
  11. Lenovo (LNVGY)
  12. LG Electronics,
  13. Novatel (NVTL),
  14. Option NV (OPTI),
  15. Palm,
  16. Panasonic (PC),
  17. Pantech,
  18. Research in Motion (RIMM),
  19. Sharp (SHCAY),
  20. Sierra Wireless (SWIR),
  21. Sony (SNE),
  22. Sony Ericsson,
  23. T-Mobile,
  24. UTStarcom (USTI)  and
  25. ZTE (783).

In addition, it wants treble damages against T-Mobile, HTC, LG, Palm, RIM and Sony Ericsson, and lawyers’ costs.

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Like I have pointed out again and again and again, many firm’s business plan has de-evolved into patent trolling.

Does GBT deserve to collect a tax from every innovator?

Foxconn – The Empire Apple Made

AppleHon Hai Precision Industry Foxconn is now the biggest exporter out of China. The firm churns out products like iPadsiPhones and PlayStations for Americans. Among its clients are Apple, Cisco (CSCO), Dell, HP, IBM, Microsoft (MSFT), Nokia (NOK) and Sony (SNE).  Most American consumers never head of Foxconn, which is also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, until employees began to commit suicide by leaping off its buildings. However the firm has a longer history.

Terry Gou aka the ‘general’ founded Foxconn in 1974 with a $7,500 loan from his mother. According to a recent Buisnessweek article his first world headquarters was a rented shed in a gritty Taipei suburb called Tucheng, which means Dirt City in Mandarin. Mr. Gou, then 23, had done three years of vocational training and served in the military. He then worked for two years as a shipping clerk, where he got a firsthand view of Taiwan’s booming export economy and figured he ought to stop pushing paper and get into the game. With the cash from his mother, he bought a couple of plastic molding machines and started making channel-changing knobs for black-and-white televisions. His first customer was Chicago-based Admiral TV, and he soon got deals to supply RCA, Zenith, and Philips (PHG).

Mr. Gou’s first step into American consumer electronics came in 1980 when he started supplying Atari with connectors that linked the joystick cable to its 2600 video-game console. At the height of the Atari craze, Hon Hai was producing connectors for the 15,000 video-game consoles that Atari’s Taiwanese plant made daily. Buisnessweek says Mr. Gou wasn’t content to be a mere supplier of dumb parts. He applied for patents on the technology his company developed, and he kept pressing into new areas.

IBMIn the early ’80s, Mr. Gou took an 11-month tour of the U.S. covering 32 states, during which he dropped in on companies unannounced. Buisnessweek reports that during this trip, he spent three days in Raleigh, N.C., motel close to an IBM (IBM) facility to get an appointment after which he came away with a firm order for connectors. “He is really one of the top sales guys in the world,” Max Fang, the former head of procurement for Dell in Asia who did business with Mr. Gou and was his regular golf partner told Buisnessweek. “He is very aggressive and always on your tail.”

Mr. Gou was early to recognize that China offered an almost limitless supply of cheap labor and was not deterred by  the primitive infrastructure or the Communist government. He set up shop in a suburb of Shenzhen across the border from Hong Kong.  In 1991, Mr. Gou listed Hon Hai Precision on the Taiwan Stock Exchange to fund expansion, mostly into China. By 1996, Mr. Gou told Buisnessweek, it was clear to him that China would become a manufacturing juggernaut, and he started investing heavily in his facilities at Longhua Science & Technology Park aka “Foxconn City.”

CompaqIn 1996, Mr. Gou offered to build the chassis for Compaq’s desktop computers at a fraction of what it would cost Compaq to do the job itself.  “He had this vision and the guts to do anything in a big way,” Mr. Fang is quoted in Buisnessweek. “When I first visited the factory, I saw the whole value chain nicely and effectively designed, starting from a big coil of sheet metal at one end that was cut, formed, welded, and stamped to make the top and bottom of the chassis. Then they did the in-line subassembly, adding a floppy drive, the power supply, and cables. It was all shipped to customers who only had to install the motherboard, CPU, memory, and hard drive. After this revolution by Terry, final computer assembly was easy.”

Buisnessweek says that to sustain an efficient Chinese workforce, Mr. Gou quickly discovered that he had to offer housing, food, and health care, additional costs that kept most of his competitors out of the country. He had to do everything himself. Michael Marks, then chief executive officer of contract-manufacturing giant Flextronics (FLEX), saw Foxconn’s Shenzhen operations taking shape in the late 1990s, “They were making wire out of ingots of copper,” says Mr. Marks. “They had chicken farms to lay the eggs for the cafeteria. One building had 2,000 toolmakers. We had none at the time. But we did after that.”

DellFoxconn was transforming the industry. It was shipping bare-bones computers to IBM, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and Apple (AAPL). In 1998, when Mr. Gou won his first order from Dell (DELL) to make the chassis for its desktops, Dell insisted he do it in the U.S., close to the final market. “I bought a company in Kansas City. We quickly needed tooling shops and stamping,” Mr. Gou told Buisnessweek. “That factory was a money loser, but Terry had to build it to accommodate Dell against his own will,” recalls Mr. Fang. “For Foxconn, it bought a ticket into the Dell business.”

Apple Disrupts Mobile PC Market

Compaq PortableApple is riding a wave of success now and is disrupting the mobile PC market for its competition. KPCB says that social networking will drive the mobile PC market for the rest of this decade. Facebook has 662 million users and Twitter has 253 million users which will continue to grow. TechEYE points out that mobile products now have more processing power, improved user interfaces and lower prices meaning that there are now ten times more mobile devices globally than a decade ago.

Social networkingTechEYE says that the link between social networking and mobile devices can be seen clearly in the Japanese market where a general rise in access to social networking sites has increased, while the amount of people accessing them from a traditional PC has steadily decreased – 85 percent of users accessing sites from mobile devices in the last quarter of 2010.

Apple ComputersSurging iPad shipments have propelled Apple (AAPL) to a 17.2% share of the global mobile PC market.  ITnewsLink reports that this puts Apple at the top of the Q4’10 DisplaySearch market share ranking of worldwide mobile PC shipments. The preliminary results from the Quarterly Mobile PC Shipment and Forecast Report says Apple shipped more than 10.2 million notebook and tablet PCs combined. This was nearly a million more units than HP in Q4’10. ITnewsLink quotes Richard Shim, Senior Analyst at DisplaySearch on Apple’s success.

“While we anticipate increased competition in the tablet PC market later this year with the introduction of Android Honeycomb-based tablets, Apple’s iPad business is complementing a notebook line whose shipments widely exceed the industry average growth rate. Apple is currently benefiting from significant and comprehensive growth from both sectors of the mobile PC spectrum, notebooks and tablet PCs. Cannibalization seems limited at this point.”

The top five brands in the mobile PC market Q4’10 are:

  1. Apple
  2. HP (HPQ)
  3. Acer (ACEIF)
  4. Dell (DELL)
  5. Toshiba (TOSBF)

The top five brands accounted for 65.4% of the total mobile PC market. In Q4’10, worldwide mobile PC shipments (including tablet PCs) reached 59.6 million units according to DisplaySearch.

Research In MotionThe drive keep up with the Jobs’s will cause supply chain disruptions for Apple’s mobile PC competition TechEYE says. DigiTimes reports that supplies of notebook components are running short, including CMOS image sensors, chassis, batteries, and LED’s. TechEYE sources report that Delltouchpads are suffering the most serious shortage as a result of Apple hogging the supply from manufacturers such as Wintek and TPK. Reports are that Apple has reserved 60% of global touchpad production capacity. RIM (RIM), Motorola (MMI), HP. HTC, Samsung, LG and Dell now all have to fight it out for the remaining 40% of touchpads.

TechEYE predicts that panels will be like gold dust. Bob Raikes, Managing Director at Meko, The European Display Market Research specialist, told TechEYE , “Touch technology also tended to limit the visual quality of the display …  Then Apple’s iPhone started to use projected capacitive touch technology. which didn’t degrade the image and allowed a new level of user experience. In the last year, there has been a huge swing to use projected capacitive technology in high volume portable devices, and the supply chain has struggled to catch up.  Chunghwa Picture Tubes is teaming up with Compal, one of the biggest manufacturers of laptops for the multinationals, to piece together a business in touch panel glass. Compal recognizes that tablets are here to drain the world of its glass supplies and wants to capitalize.

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Looks like Steve Jobs is at it again. In the past, Apple bought up flash memory stores to secure an advantage for their iPod  MP3 players. You have to image that the rest of the tablet field is none too pleased with Apple’s tactics.

What do you think?

Do you have an iPad?

Are you waiting for another tablet?

Where do smart phones fit in this equation?

Big Tech Increases Lobbying

The Business Insider has a great post which lays out the lobbying spending by most of the techs stalwarts.  Arik Hesseldahl at All Things D compiled the data. The data says that the telecoms spent the most on lobbying last year. The biggest spender was Verizon (NYSE : VZ) which spent $3.83 million, an increase of nearly $1 million over last year. AT&T (NYSE : T) spent $3.47 million on lobbying.

Hewlett-Packard (NASDAQ : HPQ) spent $1.6 million on lobbying in 2010, which is nearly double what it spent last year. Microsoft (NASDAQ ; MSFT), Oracle (NASDAQ : ORCL), Google (NASDAQ : GOOG), IBM (NYSE : IBM) and Yahoo (NASDAQ : YHOO) also increased the dollars spent on lobbying from 2009 to 2010. Only Intel (NASDAQ : INTC) decreased it’s lobbying spending in 2010.

The Business Insider points out that despite their incredible influence in the world of tech, Apple (NASDAQ : AAPL) and Facebook are hardly spending anything on lobbying. The post speculates that while Apple is influential, it doesn’t dominate anything other than mp3 players, so the government has had little reason to mess with it. (Apple rules the tablet world, but that’s an 8 month old market.) Also, Apple doesn’t do big blockbuster acquisitions that the government looks at.

Facebook spent the least of anyone with just $120,000. The author expects this will change soon as the company’s power is growing quickly, drawing the eye of regulators.

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The telecom monoliths  spent $7.3 million on lobbying, which is more than HP, MSFT, Google and IBM combined what are they up to?  I wrote about AT&T’s activities previously, clearly these firms expect something back from the politicians they bribe donate to.  History has proven that the politicians on the receiving end of the bribes donations generate results for their largest contributors and not the SMB or end-user.

What do you think? What are these tech stalwarts getting for their money in Washington DC?

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