Mac malware that infected Facebook bypassed OS X Gatekeeper protection

Researchers have identified the Mac malware that infected employees of Apple, Facebook, and Twitter, and say it may have been used to compromise machines in other US organizations, including auto manufacturers, government agencies, and a leading candy maker, according to a published report. Pintsized.A is a new family of Mac malware that uses an exploit to bypass Gatekeeper, an OS X protection that allows end users to tightly control which sources are permitted to install apps , according to an article published Monday by The Security Ledger. Mac antivirus provider Intego says  the trojan masquerades on infected machines as Linux printing software known as cupsd, although it runs from a different location than the legitimate title. It’s unclear exactly how the malware gets around Gatekeeper. Once installed, Pintsized establishes a reverse shell to a command and control server controlled by the attackers. It uses a modified version of the OpenSSH utility to encrypt traffic, a measure that can help it remain undetected on infected networks. One of the domain names that hosted such a server was corp-aapl.com. It caught the attention of members of Facebook’s security team, tipping them off that there was an infected machine inside their network . When they later took control of the domain, they discovered multiple other companies were also compromised by the same attackers. Around the same time, Apple , Twitter , and Microsoft were also hit with attacks that meet the same pattern. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Mac malware that infected Facebook bypassed OS X Gatekeeper protection

Remembering the Dead: The Bone House in Hallstatt, Austria

The other night, my friend’s mother lost her battle against cancer. He is a funeral director and owner of Elemental Cremation & Burial  in Seattle, and has dedicated his career to helping families during some of the darkest moments of their lives. He challenges the status quo in the American funeral industry, and looks for innovative and dynamic ways to memorialize the dead.  This post is for Jeff Jorgenson, in memory of his mother, Judy Burnett. For those who donate to MEDICINE’S DARK SECRETS in the next 48 hours, I will give 10% of the proceeds to the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY .   Grief. It’s something that affects us all. And yet, we are so unprepared when it comes knocking on our own door. I have often said that as a historian of medicine, I am comforted in the knowledge that we are united with the past in our struggle against disease and suffering. The same can be said of our capacity to grieve, to mourn and to remember those whom we’ve loved and lost. There are countless examples around the world of places where the dead are immortalised in strange and unique ways. One of my favourites is the Beinhaus [Bone House] in Hallstatt, Austria. The Beinhaus came into existence in the 12 th century due to the lack of space in the small village’s cemetery. Graves were reopened after 10-15 years and the skeletal remains were moved to a charnel house to make room for the burial of the newly deceased. Beginning in 1720, villagers began bleaching the disinterred skulls of their predecessors by placing the heads outside in the sun for weeks at a time. In addition to the names of the departed, townspeople would paint elaborate floral patterns on the skulls in the way that one might decorate a grave with flowers today. Beside the cross in the center of the Beinhaus is a skull with a gold tooth. It belongs to a woman who died in 1983. Her last request was for her body to be disinterred and her skull to be placed in the charnel house. She was the last to enter the ossuary in 1995. For me, the Beinhaus symbolises our desire as human beings to remember those who passed before us—to hold on, in some way, to the lives that were lived—for those who were buried in Hallstatt, Austria, did not remain so forever. Far from being creepy, I believe it is a place of beauty; a place of peace; a place of reflection. And in a world where grieving is often marginalized, minimalized, even medicalized, it is no small wonder that so many people  visit the Beinhaus each year and feel in awe of the way this tiny village has encapsulated so perfectly the phrase: ‘dead but not forgotten.’

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Remembering the Dead: The Bone House in Hallstatt, Austria

Marvel offers over 700 free first issue digital comics, might involve great powers and responsibilities

Looking to revise the whys, hows and who’s who of the Marvel universe? Well, the movie-spinning comic book company wants to help you out, offering hundreds of first issue editions across the company’s entire history. The free digital editions will cover perennial favorites like Spider-Man, the X-Men and Avengers, as well as slightly less mainstream hits and spin-offs. The promotion kicked off yesterday and — tying in with the company’s presence at SXSW — will run until 11PM ET on Tuesday. The titles can be downloaded through either Marvel’s official comics app or its web-based digital comics shop, although it appears US readers are having more luck downloading the digital comics — we’re getting error messages when trying to access it elsewhere. Of course, if you’ve already signed up to Marvel’s Unlimited subscription service , there might not much here to pull you in, but this limited-time offer is unashamedly courting new readers and comic dabblers. If that sounds like you, start hunting down those hundreds of freebies at the source. Filed under: Misc , Internet , Software Comments Via: The Verge Source: Marvel (1) , (2)

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Marvel offers over 700 free first issue digital comics, might involve great powers and responsibilities

How Many Calories Does a Mouse Click Burn?

For those of us who spend the best part of our day hunched over a keyboard starting at a computer screen, any physical exertion—however small—has to go some way towards constituting exercise. So how many calories does a mouse click burn? More »

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How Many Calories Does a Mouse Click Burn?

Ube WiFi Smart Dimmer to recieve customized multitouch gesture control

Here’s a cool little addition to the increasingly competitive world of home automation . Ube’s got a WiFi Smart Dimmer that utilizes multitouch functionality to control the the lights in your house — use one finger to turn off a single light, or use two to turn off a set. The company picked SXSW as the venue to announce the forthcoming launch of customized gestures for other smart devices — in the example given to us by CEO Utz Baldwin, a user can input a “W” to turn on the sprinklers — or an “A” plus up swipe to turn on an alarm and an “A” plus a down swipe to disable it. Sadly, the functionality won’t be available for the launch of the first generation, though it’s likely to come in time for the second generation, along with a software update for early adopters. Interested parties can support the company via Kickstarter right now — Ube’s a bit over halfway to its goal of $280,000, with 24 days to go. You can also watch Baldwin discuss the product and today’s news in a video after the break. Gallery: Ube WiFi Smart Dimmer hands-on Comments Source: Kickstarter

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Ube WiFi Smart Dimmer to recieve customized multitouch gesture control

What Really Smart People Worry About At Night

What do you lay awake at night worrying about? Are your worries different than those far smarter than you? Perhaps. John Brockman of Edge magazine asked what the world’s most intelligent brainiacs – including Physics Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek, technologist Tim O’Reilly, musician Brian Eno, The Black Swan author Nassim Nicholas Taleb – about their professional worries and got a lot of responses. One hundred and fifty distinct worries, in fact. Thankfully, VICE’s Motherboard blog has summarized it for us : 1. The proliferation of Chinese eugenics. – Geoffrey Miller, evolutionary psychologist. 2. Black swan events, and the fact that we continue to rely on models that have been proven fraudulent. – Nassem Nicholas Taleb 3. That we will be unable to defeat viruses by learning to push them beyond the error catastrophe threshold. – William McEwan, molecular biology researcher 4. That pseudoscience will gain ground. – Helena Cronin, author, philospher 5. That the age of accelerating technology will overwhelm us with opportunities to be worried. – Dan Sperber, social and cognitive scientist 6. Genuine apocalyptic events. The growing number of low-probability events that could lead to the total devastation of human society. – Martin Rees, former president of the Royal Society 7. The decline in science coverage in newspapers. – Barbara Strauch, New York Times science editor 8. Exploding stars, the eventual collapse of the Sun, and the problems with the human id that prevent us from dealing with them. — John Tooby, founder of the field of evolutionary psychology 9. That the internet is ruining writing. – David Gelernter, Yale computer scientist 10. That smart people–like those who contribute to Edge–won’t do politics. –Brian Eno, musician 11. That there will be another supernova-like financial disaster. –Seth Lloyd, professor of Quantum Mechanical Engineering at MIT 12. That search engines will become arbiters of truth. –W. Daniel Hillis, physicist 13. The dearth of desirable mates is something we should worry about, for “it lies behind much human treachery and brutality.” –David M. Buss, professor of psychology at U of T 14. “I’m worried that our technology is helping to bring the long, postwar consensus against fascism to an end.” –David Bodanis, writer, futurist 15. That we will continue to uphold taboos on bad words. –Benhamin Bergen, Associate Professor of Cognitive Science, UCS Humanity, start worrying! Or, you can just accept it all, like Terry Gilliam of Monty Python, who said: I’ve given up asking questions. l merely float on a tsunami of acceptance of anything life throws at me… and marvel stupidly. Read the original post over at Edge: Link | Summary at Motherboard blog

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What Really Smart People Worry About At Night

Massive Email Crash Hits Canadian ISP Shaw

rueger writes “One of Canada’s biggest cable/Internet providers has their customers in an outrage. ‘… after an interruption of Shaw’s email services Thursday led to millions of emails being deleted … About 70 per cent of Shaw’s email customers were affected when the company was troubleshooting an unrelated email delay problem and an attempted solution caused incoming emails to be deleted … Emails were deleted for a 10-hour period between 7:45 a.m. and 6:15 p.m. Thursday, although customers did not learn about the problem until Friday, and only then by calling customer service or accessing an online forum for Shaw Internet subscribers.’ To top it off, when Shaw did send out notices about this, they looked so much like every day phishing spam that many people deleted them unread.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Massive Email Crash Hits Canadian ISP Shaw