Sunday, February 27, 2011
Sony?s Next Generation Portable gears up for battle with Nintendo?s 3DS
The scene is being set for the biggest gaming battle of them all as the two big bosses of handheld gaming consoles, Sony and Nintendo.kitchen appliances
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Why the SEO Industry Changes So Often
Let?s face it the SEO industry is a lot like a runaway train at times and all you can really do is just hold on for dear life and embrace the ongoing changes.kitchen equipment
home appliances
Friday, February 25, 2011
Massive SEO & Social Media Changes Ahead!
I?ve been researching this topic in depth, and in this video, I share with you some of the most important information you?ll use in the year ahead for seokitchen appliances
kitchen equipment
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Massive SEO & Social Media Changes Ahead!
I?ve been researching this topic in depth, and in this video, I share with you some of the most important information you?ll use in the year ahead for seokitchen appliances
kitchen equipment
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
VBrick Acquires On-Demand Video Hosting Platform Fliqz
Video streaming service VBrick has acquired Fliqz, a plug and play video platform for websites. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.kitchen equipment
home appliances
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Sony: if you crack your PS3, you?ll get banned
Sony Computer Entertainment has released a statement regarding PlayStation 3 circumvention devices and pirated software. It’s what everyone expected itRead the Rest...home appliances kitchen appliances
Friday, February 18, 2011
Chinese hackers attack Canadian government
Chinese hackers recently conducted a massive cyberattack on Canadian government websites and employees, giving them access to an abundance of highly classified federal information. The attack, first detected last month, was initially mentioned by the government as an attempt to access their computers. This is inaccurate, according to a number of anonymous sources cited by the CBC.
The hackers were actually successful in their attempts. Canada\'s two major economic departments, the Finance Department and the Treasury Board, were the main victims of the attack. After hackers gained control of the computers of senior government executives in the two departments, the hackers were unable to obtain password information to unlock entire government systems. Immediately after the attack, the government shut down all Internet access in both departments in an attempt to stop any information from being stolen and transmitted to the hackers. Unfortunately, it is unclear whether or not the hackers were able to access any other governmental computer networks.
In the past month, thousands of government employees did not have Internet access as officials attempted to fix the situation. Sources say the hackers used a spear-phishing attack: they gained control of Canadian officials\' government computers, posed as executives, and sent out e-mails to technical staff from the departments to trick them into releasing key passwords that give access to several government networks. The hackers also sent other employees viruses that hunted down specific classified government information. It\'s still unclear how much classified information was stolen.
The hackers were actually successful in their attempts. Canada\'s two major economic departments, the Finance Department and the Treasury Board, were the main victims of the attack. After hackers gained control of the computers of senior government executives in the two departments, the hackers were unable to obtain password information to unlock entire government systems. Immediately after the attack, the government shut down all Internet access in both departments in an attempt to stop any information from being stolen and transmitted to the hackers. Unfortunately, it is unclear whether or not the hackers were able to access any other governmental computer networks.
In the past month, thousands of government employees did not have Internet access as officials attempted to fix the situation. Sources say the hackers used a spear-phishing attack: they gained control of Canadian officials\' government computers, posed as executives, and sent out e-mails to technical staff from the departments to trick them into releasing key passwords that give access to several government networks. The hackers also sent other employees viruses that hunted down specific classified government information. It\'s still unclear how much classified information was stolen.
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