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Cool gadget - Samsung SUR40

Posted by Eurobyte on 28 August 2012

This is a 40" HD touch screen table-top computer. It's like a BIG tablet but with a LOT of computing power.

With its RRP of around $13,000 it is not meant (unfortunately) for home users but businesses and retailers (especially travel agents, doctor surgeries, hotel lobbies, museums, etc.). For example, SUR40 has been deployed at Harvey Norman stores across Australia as "Photo Booth", where the unit enables users to create a virtual photo book which they're then able to print out. Click here to watch a SUR40 video published last month by The Australian.

Samsung SUR40

Posted in:Microsoft Surfacetabletgadgets   Comments

New Apple Mac malware that can learn an awful lot about you

Posted by Eurobyte on 28 August 2012

Spying on browsing and instant messaging activities

A new Mac OS X Trojan referred to as OSX/Crisis silently infects OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and OS X 10.7 Lion. It then spies on the user by monitoring Adium, Firefox, Microsoft Messenger, Safari, and Skype.

The threat installs itself silently (no user interaction required) and does not need your user password to infect your Mac. It exploits Java vulnerabilities, but since OS X 10.7 Lion doesn’t include Java by default, this is suggesting there are other ways for this malware to infect your Mac. Newly released Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion doesn’t seem to be affected by the OSX/Crisis.

The malware allows the person operating it to:

  • Spy on Skype audio traffic and record all conversations and phone calls.
  • Spy on Safari or Firefox browsers to record URLs and screenshots.
  • Record IM messages in both Microsoft Messenger and Adium.
  • Send file contents to the control server.

As this is a very advanced threat and since it hasn’t been seen in the wild yet, you’re unlikely to get infected by it. Still, if your work on Apple Mac is critical or you have classified information stored on it, it is very important that your security updates are always up to date and that you’re using an updated antivirus program.

Microsoft also suggests doing something about your Java as Java-based malware sees no end. So regardless of whether you’re using Mac or Windows-based computers, this is what Microsoft asks you to do with Java: "Update it, disable it, or kill it."

Posted in:AntivirusmalwareMac   Comments