Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “The Boston Globe reports that the pending use of GPS tracking devices, slated to be installed in Boston police cruisers, has many officers worried that commanders will monitor their every move. Boston police administrators say the system gives dispatchers the ability to see where officers are, rather than wait for a radio response and supervisors insist the system will improve their response to emergencies. Using GPS, they say, accelerates their response to a call for a shooting or an armed robbery. ‘We’ll be moving forward as quickly as possible, ‘ says former police commissioner Edward F. Davis. ‘There are an enormous amount of benefits. . . . This is clearly an important enhancement and should lead to further reductions in crime.’ But some officers said they worry that under such a system they will have to explain their every move and possibly compromise their ability to court street sources. ‘No one likes it. Who wants to be followed all over the place?’ said one officer who spoke anonymously because department rules forbid police from speaking to the media without authorization. ‘If I take my cruiser and I meet [reluctant witnesses] to talk, eventually they can follow me and say why were you in a back dark street for 45 minutes? It’s going to open up a can of worms that can’t be closed.’ Meanwhile civil libertarians are relishing the rank and file’s own backlash. ‘The irony of police objecting to GPS technology for privacy reasons is hard to miss in the aftermath of United States v. Jones, ‘ says Woodrow Hartzog. ‘But the officers’ concerns about privacy illustrate just how revealing GPS technology can be. Departments are going to have to confront the chilling effect this surveillance might have on police behavior.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS

The Prettiest iPad Drawing App Now Has the Prettiest Stylus Companion

Have you used Paper by 53 Design? It’s that iPad drawing app that is so decked out in pretty, design-y, feel-good-ness that it makes all who use it feel like Matisse. Well, now its creators have put out an equally gorgeous stylus. Read more…        

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The Prettiest iPad Drawing App Now Has the Prettiest Stylus Companion

Backup the best defense against (Cri)locked files

Crilock – also known as CryptoLocker – is one notorious ransomware that’s been making the rounds since early September. Its primary payload is to target and encrypt your files, such as your pictures and Office documents. All of the file types that can be encrypted are listed in our Trojan:Win32/Crilock.A and Trojan:Win32/Crilock.B descriptions. Crilock affected about 34, 000 machines between September and early November 2013. Once Crilock encrypts your file types, they are rendered unusable. The malware shows a message that covers your desktop and demands you pay a ransom to have access to your files again. The ransom can be paid with various online currencies such as BitCoin, CashU, MoneyPak, Paysafecard, and Ukash. Once you pay, the malware author will supposedly give you back the private keys used in encryption. However, we don’t recommend doing this as there is no guarantee that paying will lead to recovering your documents and, in effect, you’re giving criminals some of your hard-earned money. Figure 1: The message that Crilock might display on your desktop Figure 2: Crilock asks you to upload your encrypted documents and recover them for a fee The Crilock authors have even setup an online payment scheme on the Tor network where affected people can upload their encrypted files for recovery. Crilock encrypts your files using an AES-256 key that is unique to each file and then encrypts the file-specific AES key using a 2048-bit RSA public key. This is similar to the GpCode ransomware, which first came out in 2006 and used the same technique, but with RC4 first, and then 1024-bit RSA for encrypting the per-file key. Crilock can be downloaded onto your computer by exploits or malware. For instance, we have seen Upatre  download Zbot, which in turn downloads Crilock. Upatre has been heavily spammed in the past few months, and spam runs can be an effective way to distribute malware. This is discussed in detail in the blog post Upatre: Emerging Up(d)at(er) in the wild . As shown in the chart below, Crilock has predominantly affected English-speaking countries, although it does have a comparatively small presence in non-English speaking locations as well. Every Crilock variant we’ve seen so far has a ransom message written only in English. Figure 3: Crilock-affected countries from September 2013 to early November 2013 Can you recover your documents without paying? In some cases, you can recover previous versions of encrypted files. However, the following conditions must be in place: System Restore Point must have been turned on before you were infected with Crilock. You must already have detected and removed Crilock, and there can be no traces of it on your PC. Your files must be on the same PC you’re using to recover them (that is, the files aren’t on a network or removable drive). SkyDrive for Windows 8.1 also has a means of restoring previous versions of Microsoft documents. Similar to System Restore Point, you can look at the version history and recover files from a previous state. Figure 4: Right-click on the file to see available version history Figure 5: Restore file from older known working versions    You can find more information about restoring previous file versions below: Restore files or folders using File History Previous versions of files: frequently asked questions SkyDrive Overview We’ve also added signatures based on Crilock behaviors to our antimalware products. This detection, Behavior:Win32/Crilock.A , can detect an infection before it infects and encrypts files. Crilock is not the first malware to extort money by encrypting files and it certainly won’t be the last. However, you can help prevent Crilock and other malware, from infecting your PC by: Keeping your operating system and antivirus product up-to-date. Being careful about which files you download (and where you download from). Being cautious about which attachments and links you open. Ransomware such as Crilock also emphasizes the importance of backing up your files on a regular basis. You can back up files by enabling System Restore, using manual syncing methods, or even by manually moving your files to a separate drive. Marianne Mallen and Karthik Selvaraj MMPC

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Backup the best defense against (Cri)locked files

Google Maps image of boy’s dead body to be removed

Google Maps is replacing a satellite image that shows the body of Kevin Barrera, a 14-year-old who was murdered in 2009 in Richmond, California. The boy’s father, Jose Barrera, apparently found out about the picture just a few days ago, commenting “When I see this image, that’s still like that happened yesterday.” Google says it will take eight days to swap it out. “Google has never accelerated the replacement of updated satellite imagery from our maps before, but given the circumstances we wanted to make an exception in this case,” Google Maps VP Brian McClendon told the San Francisco Chronicle. I don’t care to reproduce the sad image here, but the San Francisco Chronicle did. ” Google to fix map image showing slain boy ” (SF Chronicle)        

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Google Maps image of boy’s dead body to be removed

Feds arrest ATM thieves after discovering $800,000 stuffed in a suitcase

Noah Coffey Federal authorities have arrested five more men accused of taking part in a 21st-century bank heist that siphoned a whopping $45 million out of ATMs around the world in a matter of hours. Prosecutors said the men charged on Monday were members of the New York-based cell of a global operation and contributed to the $45 million theft by illegally withdrawing $2.8 million from 140 different ATMs in that city. The arrests came after the defendants sent $800,000 in cash proceeds in a suitcase transported by bus to a syndicate kingpin located in Florida, US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Loretta E. Lynch said . Photos seized from one defendant’s iPhone showed huge amounts of cash piled on a hotel bed and being stuffed into luggage, she said. The heists took place during two dates in December 2012 and targeted payment cards issued by the National Bank of Ras Al-Khaimah PSC in the United Arab Emirates and the Bank of Muscat in Oman respectively. Prosecutors dubbed the heists “unlimited” operations because they systematically removed the withdrawal limits normally placed on debit card accounts. These restrictions work as a safety mechanism that caps the amount of loss that banks normally face when something goes wrong. The operation removed the limits by hacking into two companies that processed online payments for the two targeted banks, prosecutors alleged in earlier indictments. Prosecutors didn’t identify the payment processors except to say that one was in India and the other was in the United States. Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Feds arrest ATM thieves after discovering $800,000 stuffed in a suitcase

World’s first 128GB phone now available from Meizu, but only works in China

You may recall that a little while back we checked out China’s Meizu MX3 , and in addition to its unique 15:9 1, 800 x 1, 080 display, one of its other selling points is the 128GB storage option. Well, this version is finally available as of today, except it’s only offered to the TD-SCDMA variant of the phone, meaning you can only use it on China Mobile’s network or, if you’re desperate, any GSM 2G network. If that’s no problem and you have an address in China, then you can head over to online store JD.com and hand over CN¥3, 999 (about US$660) for the 5.1-inch, Exynos 5 Octa -powered device off contract. As for the rest of us, it’s probably just a matter of time before the WCDMA-flavored MX3 gets the same treatment, so stay tuned. Alternatively, the upcoming Vivo Xplay 3 is rumored to have a 128GB option as well, and given that it’ll support both TD-LTE and FD-LTE, it might be a better buy for us speed freaks outside China. Filed under: Cellphones , Mobile Comments Via: Engadget Chinese Source: JD

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World’s first 128GB phone now available from Meizu, but only works in China

Unbrick a Router with a Raspberry Pi

Everyone makes mistakes, and if you’re the type to fiddle around with your router, there’s a reasonable chance you’ve bricked one before. Over on the blog Oxblog, they show you how you can use a Raspberry Pi to debrick that router and get it running again. Read more…        

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Folding Wings Will Let Boeing’s New 777x Squeeze Into Small Airports

Commercial planes have gotten bigger and bigger over the past few decades, but the size of the gate at most airports have stayed the same. To circumvent this little infrastructural disconnect, Boeing’s future 777x jet will have a massive wingspan that folds up upon landing. Read more…        

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Folding Wings Will Let Boeing’s New 777x Squeeze Into Small Airports

Marissa Mayer: Yahoo will encrypt all user data by early 2014

Yahoo recently announced that it will encrypt webmail by default, and today Marissa Mayer shared that the security measure will be applied across all Yahoo products “by the end of Q1 2014.” In a post on the company Tumblr, CEO Mayer outlined three specific measures to protect user data: Encrypt all information that moves between our data centers by the end of Q1 2014; Offer users an option to encrypt all data flow to/from Yahoo by the end of Q1 2014; Work closely with our international Mail partners to ensure that Yahoo co-branded Mail accounts are https-enabled.​ This news is no doubt a response to persisting questions — and court cases — about the scope of the NSA’s information-tapping policies as they relate to internet giants such as Facebook, Google and Yahoo. As the company has previously asserted, Mayer emphasized that Yahoo has “never given access to… data centers to the NSA or to any other government agency. Ever.” Filed under: Internet Comments Source: Yahoo

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Qualcomm’s Toq wants to be your platform-agnostic color smartwatch

Qualcomm Qualcomm became a surprise entrant in the wearable computing race when it announced its Toq smartwatch. Designed as a showcase for some of Qualcomm’s latest technology, the $349.99 Toq will go on sale on December 2nd through its own portal. From a function perspective, Toq follows somewhat worn paths with notifications sent from your phone, music playback controls, and additional data pushed from an on-phone app. Where Toq differs is less in interactions than hardware features. The display Qualcomm chose is its own Mirasol MEMS-based display. In effect, Mirasol is like a mash-up of E Ink and LCD displays, providing a low-power, static color image where appropriate, with video and animation capabilities that exceed those of traditional E Ink displays. Charging your Toq occurs through Qualcomm’s own WiPower LE wireless charging protocol, and the included charger serves as a case as well. Most smartwatches connect primarily through Bluetooth LE; Qualcomm’s Toq also includes access to its open source AllJoyn protocol, which offers a platform-agnostic approach to device-to-device communications. AllJoyn-enabled devices and software can interact with your Toq over WiFi-Direct or Bluetooth. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Qualcomm’s Toq wants to be your platform-agnostic color smartwatch