Wednesday, May 18, 2011

557 Search has its price By Martin J Young HUA HIN, Thailand -






United States President Barack Obama's confirmation of the death of the world's most wanted man, Osama bin Laden, caused a surge of activity on the web, not just from people hungry for instant news, updates and interactive maps, but from cyber criminals eager to make a quick profit or spread their malicious software. 


Micro-blogging website Twitter saw the highest sustained rate of tweets at over 3,000 per second for a couple of hours on the day of the announcement. An image posted on Flickr depicting Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and members of the national security team huddled in a situation room received over 1.6 million views in 36 hours. 


Google reported that it saw a 1,000,000% increase in searches for "Bin Laden" in the hour leading up to the official announcement as news broke on various websites and thousands took to Google's mapping services to locate the three-storey compound

hideout in which Osama spent his final moments in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad. 



Scores of web weasels wasted little time in setting up hundreds of fake websites, online traps, and cyber scams in efforts to lure unsuspecting net surfers into downloading malware. One of the most popular searches has been in Google Images for the man himself; several Bin Laden images simply redirected users to malicious websites that tried to convince them that their computer was infected with a virus. 


The website then prompted them to pay for fake anti-virus software via credit card (after stealing the details) or offered them free software to clean the computer - which was actually clean until the fake malware had been installed on it by the unwitting user. 


Facebook has also been flooded with fake ads directed at users sharing Bin Laden stories; once clicked on, users are directed to scammy websites requesting personal details in order to qualify for free gifts and prizes. 


Researchers at security company Sophos reported a "death video" that had been circulating virally on the social network. Users who "liked" the video or shared it with friends opened themselves up to cyber scammers who gained access to their contacts list and personal information. 


Facebook is probably the most dangerous platform out there and one of the easiest for scammers to manipulate as the nature of it relies on people trusting content recommended and posted by their friends on the network. That said, the ease at which cyber criminals can manipulate Google's search algorithm in order to get their own toxic websites ranking higher than genuine ones also leaves a lot of questions about the multi-billion dollar company. 


Internet
A new department has been born in the People's Republic of China in an effort to strengthen the management of Internet content to the world's largest online market. The State Internet Information Office appears to be intended to manage rivalry among a dozen or so Chinese ministries and agencies with a stake in the Internet. 


China has the world's largest number of Internet users at over 450 million; it is also a rapidly expanding industry worth billions of dollars, so there is no surprise that a number of separate government agencies have been squabbling over the control of it for a seat on the digital gravy train through licensing and regulation. 


The government on Wednesday said the new department would coordinate and supervise online content management and handle administrative approval of businesses related to online news reporting. It would also investigate and punish websites found to be in violation of the ever-tightening censorship laws, oversee telecommunications service providers, Internet address allocation, registration of websites, and direct the development of online gaming, online video and audio businesses according to state run news agency Xinhua. 


China's Internet surveillance system, otherwise known as the "Great Firewall", requires that websites and companies operating within the country self-censor or face being taken offline. The government strives extremely hard to control what its citizens can view on the Internet and it is highly likely that the new department will be adding a lot more bricks to the wall. 


Security
Following last week's catastrophic security breach of Sony Entertainment's data servers company, chief executive Howard Stringer has publically apologized for the incident in an effort to reassure Sony's 100,000-strong membership base. 


The company also revealed plans to offer customers free identity theft prevention services for a year. Sony has teamed up with identity-protection firm Debix to offer a service called AllClear ID Plus, which will alert customers to unauthorized use of their personal information and offer a US$1 million insurance policy if they become the victims of identity theft. 


Cyber security detectives from a number of firms have also been bought onboard to investigate the security breach which Sony blamed upon online vigilante group "Anonymous". The company claims that it was distracted by a denial of service attack launched by the group which enabled hackers to infiltrate their servers and gain access to personal information of tens of thousands of users. 


Martin J Young is an Asia Times Online correspondent based in Thailand. 


(Copyright 2011 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication andrepublishing.)

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