Google Cloud's prices Discount

Google Cloud prices Discount


Google Cloud goes after Amazon by slashing prices, adding new products:

Businesses looking for major storage often lean on Amazon and its cloud service platform, but Google doesn't want to be the second-string option anymore.

During its Cloud Platform conference held on Tuesday in San Francisco, the company announced price updates and new products to help customers get up and working in the cloud faster. And ultimately, earn some bigger marketshare in the cloud storage space.

Google also slashed the prices for its Cloud Platform that should make both large and small-scale business partners happy.

In addition to a 10% drop in pricing last month, here's a look at the latest cuts: BigQuery Storage falls almost 25%; PD Snapshots is down about 80%.

Meanwhile, Disk SSD storage is cut nearly in half; and the price of large Cloud SQL instances dropped 25%.?

The company announced a service called Google Container Engine that lets businesses move from managing application components running on individual virtual machines to portable Docker containers that are scheduled into a managed compute cluster for you. Google said users will be able to create and tie together container-based services to make it possible for companies to log, monitor and manage incoming data.

Another addition is App Engine with auto-scaling support, Cloud SDK integration and support for runtimes built on Docker containers. The company also introduced a network called Google Cloud Interconnect, which will serve as the foundation for apps and IT architectures and bring its fiber network to direct peering across 33 countries.

Other rollouts include carrier interconnect with partners like Verizon and VPN support, starting in early 2015. This will let users keep apps and data in-house and using the public cloud for other tasks.

Google Cloud Prices goes Down

Other additions include a cloud debugger, Firebase — a company recently acquired by Google which lets you build mobile and web real-time applications — and an autoscaler.

Read Also: Now Sync Microsoft Office with Drop Box Account


When Google launched its cloud platform back in 2008, Amazon was the only real competitor offering a similar service — it debuted its own platform two years prior.

Earlier this week, it was revealed the Ubuntu cloud images will be accessible via Google Cloud.

Google, cloud, Prices, down, Discount on Google cloud, Internet, Gadgets, Tech news.

Microsoft Office Sync with Drop Box

Microsoft Office Sync with Drop Box


Microsoft Office apps will sync right to your Dropbox account:

Dropbox just became an excellent place to store your Microsoft Office files.

The two companies announced a partnership on Tuesday that will allow Microsoft Office apps to sync directly to your Dropbox account, speeding up collaboration and editing.

After adding your Dropbox account to Microsoft Word, Excel or PowerPoint, you can navigate folders and files on Dropbox to view and edit in the native Office apps, Microsoft wrote in a blog post. The company added it will be updating its Office apps for iPad, iPhone and Android with the new feature "in the coming weeks."

On the Dropbox side, users can also edit Office documents, including Word, Excel and Powerpoint files, from within the Dropbox app on iOS and Android. The company also announced it will finally release an app for Windows phones and tablets in the next few months.

Microsoft Office Sync with Drop Box

The partnership isn't confined to mobile, though; Dropbox integration will be coming to Office's web apps sometime in 2015.

Read Also: Sharp Aquos Crystal Smart Phone Review


Microsoft and Dropbox have teamed up for tighter integration previously. Earlier this year, Dropbox revealed Project Harmony, a plan to bring collaborative real-time editing features to Microsoft Office documents for Dropbox's business users. The company promised the feature would roll out in the "coming months" in July, but hasn't revealed a specific timeline.

Software, Apps, Drop Box Synchronization with MS Office, Drop Box, Account, MS Office, Microsoft, Gadgets, Internet, Tech News.

Get Gmail 5.0 for Android before it comes to Google Play

Download Gmail 5.0


You can get Gmail 5.0 for Android before it comes to Google Play:


Gmail wants to be your one-stop shop for all your email accounts on Android. Gmail 5.0 adds support for Yahoo Mail, Outlook.com and corporate Exchange accounts. The new version also features Material design, Google's new software aesthetic.

Details about the update leaked a couple of weeks ago, and now the actual update appears to have leaked; Android Police posted links to download the .apk files. So far the update hasn't appeared in Google Play, and it's unclear if it'll come to iOS.

With Gmail 5.0, users will be able to set up and switch between other email accounts just like they would Gmail accounts, selecting the inbox they want to see by first swiping from the left, then tapping on the account.

Gmail 5.0

The new Gmail is also one of the first to incorporate much of "Material" — Google's new design methodology for Android 5.0 "Lollipop", which the company first unveiled at the Google I/O developer conference. The app makes heavy use of Material's color palate, with liberal use of layers, and many of the design elements from Inbox, Google's new standalone app that aims to re-invent the email app.

Including non-Gmail accounts in the Gmail app represents a strategic shift for Google Including non-Gmail accounts in the Gmail app represents a strategic shift for Google. Apps that consolidate email accounts from multiple services — such as Mailbox, Boxer and Acompli — are myriad, but they've become more viable alternatives to the default email apps on smartphones now that mobile notifications and background refreshing of apps have become more sophisticated. With version 5.0, Gmail will now compete more directly with third-party apps.

Read Also: Top 5 Features of New Android 5.0 (lolliPop)


At the same time, Gmail's evolution mirrors that of the Chrome browser, and helps push a more Google-centered experience on Android. While Chrome still coexists with the "Internet" app on Android devices, Chrome has become the preferred browser on the platform; Gmail appears to be doing the same thing to Android's "Email."

Apps, Software, Gmail 5.0, Gmai Android App, Google Inbox, Mobile, Smart Phones, Tech News, Google, Yahoo, Outlook Update.

Facebook's New Chat room App 'Rooms'

Facebook's Room App


Facebook Rolls Out Old-Times Like Chat Rooms App:

Facebook’s Creative Labs division has launched a new stand-alone app called Rooms. The app takes inspiration from forums, IRC chat rooms and communities we — the elder group of internet users — are familiar with.

Upon downloading the app, you can either join an existing room or create a new one. Rooms are based on a focused set of topics, ideas and events. So there could be a room for your favorite football club, your batch in university or the latest Game of Thrones episode. The descriptions, color schemes and settings of a particular room can be customized. For adding people to a room, the app creates a QR code which can be shared publicly or just amongst friends.

One great thing about the Rooms app is that you don’t have to use your real name in the app. In fact, you can choose different usernames in different rooms.

The use of QR codes is interesting. Talking about why the team behind Rooms chose them over links, the Josh Miller, who manages the project said, ‘Linking was the main way you found things in early web, but links are tough on mobile. If links were the easiest on web, photos are easiest on phone.’

Read Also: Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Tablet Review


You can simply create a QR code and post it online, share it in emails or social media or print it and put it up on a wall. Anyone who wants to join the room is prompted to open the QR code image in the Rooms app and that’s it.

Community guidelines like no abusive, no hate speech and age restrictions do apply though.

You can Download the Rooms app from iTunes here. There is no word on whether or when we can expect an Android version, though we anticipate this to happen very soon.

Facebook's Room App View

Facebook, Chat Rooms, Facebook Chat Room App, Room App by Facebook, Room App for iTunes, Room App for iPhone, Room App for iPad, iPhone, iPad, Apps, Rooms App.

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

The new Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 tablet is the very definition of an update: It's the exact same design, size and weight as the last product, with almost all the changes found under the hood, and especially, in the software.

This isn’t a bad thing. By dint of an increasingly robust ecosystem, the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is an excellent, more affordable alternative to Apple’s top-of-the-line iPad Air 2.

Light and thin:


Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 light and thin


At 13.2 ounces, the magnesium-alloy-bodied Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is noticeably lighter than the aluminum iPad Air 2, which weighs in at just under a pound. The Kindle Fire HDX is actually a smaller tablet than the Air 2, which isn't too surprising given the iPad's larger screen. It’s 9.1 x 6.2 inches, while the Air is 9.4 x 6.6 inches. Apple’s iPad Air 2, however, holds the thinness crown. It’s 0.24 in thick, while the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is 0.3 in.

On a practical level, the weight and thickness differences don’t add up to much. Both devices are light and attractive, though I still prefer Apple’s cool aluminum body and cleaner lines to the Kindle Fire’s slightly geometrically shaped back.

If you’ve never seen or held a Kindle Fire HDX (7 or 8.9 inches), you are in for a treat. It feels good and smooth and has just two buttons: Power/Sleep and a volume rocker. They’re both on the back, one on the left edge and one on the right. Kindle’s home “button” is software-based and you can access it at any time by sweeping your finger from just outside the right edge of the screen. Personally, I prefer the iPad Air 2’s physical home/touch ID button, which sits on the face of that device.

Amazon put the stereo speakers on the back of the device, but since the back is not flat, even placing the device on a table doesn’t block them. Backed by Dolby Atmos technology, these speakers offer somewhat more oomph than those on the iPad Air 2, which you can still easily block when holding that tablet in your hands.

Like the Air, the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 has two cameras, an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera and a 720p selfie/Skype camera on the front. The rear camera is a clear improvement over the last Kindle Fire HDX 8.9. Images are sharper and more color-correct, though I did detect a bit more grain than I'd like. The iPad Air 2’s 8MP iSight camera still outdoes it, though, on clarity and color.


More power:
Amazon packed more power into its fourth-generation Kindle Fire HDX 8.9. It now boasts a 2.5GHz quad-core Snapdragon CPU; the last generation Snapdragon ran at around 2.2GHz. This sounds impressive, especially since, based on my Geekbench 3 tests, the iPad Air 2’s A8X chip only runs at 1.5GHz and has just three cores. Oh, but those numbers can be deceiving.

When I ran the same Geekbench test on the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9, I found that the iPad Air 2’s multicore scores were significantly higher than those of the Fire HDX. This is one of the reasons Apple rarely publishes its exact component specs: they're too misleading.

The reality is that performance with both tablets across a wide variety of tasks, including watching movies, console-level and casual gaming, and photo editing was great. The Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 did not miss a beat.

Screen time:

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

Like Apple, Amazon spent some time enhancing its screen. The Kindle Fire HDX screen now boasts 2,560 x 1,600 resolution, or 339 pixels per inch (ppi). The iPad Air 2 is 264ppi. Amazon also claims full sRGB color accuracy. Looking at both Apple’s Retina display and the Amazon’s screen, it’s hard to see the difference. What I did notice, though, is that the iPad Air 2’s fully laminated screen has a bit more contrast and, in some cases (in comic books, for example), is actually slightly shaper than the Kindle. The iPad Air 2’s screen is also less reflective.

None of this is to say the HDX 8.9 screen didn't look good. It does. I enjoyed watching movies, playing games and reading books, magazines and comics on it.

It's all about the ecosystem
One of the great benefits of owning an Amazon Fire Phone, Fire TV, upcoming Fire TV Stick, e-reader or Kindle Fire tablet is that they are all part of an ever-widening ecosystem.

Books, movies, music and apps you buy are available on all other supported platforms, and soon with your whole family when Amazon launches “Family Library” later this year. Photos taken with any of the devices can end up in Amazon's cloud; you can put as many of them up there as you want, provided they were taken with one of Amazon’s devices.

The interface, now Fire OS 4 (built on top of Android 4.4 "KitKat"), is largely consistent across devices. Amazon pushes Android pretty far down in favor of a smartly designed, carousel-style home screen.

Read Also: Huawei Honor 4X Smart Phone Complete Specs


Up top are large icons representing recently accessed items. If you just used the Camera, it will sit beside Mail, and Angry Birds: Star Wars II, a copy of the New Yorker, various books you're reading and whatever else you've recently accessed. Below that is a more or less disorganized grid of everything you have installed on the tablet. You can hold down and drag and drop to organize the icons as you see fit.

Above the carousel is Amazon’s view of the world, also known as its main menu: Shop, Games, Apps, Books, Music, Videos, Newsstand, Audiobooks, Web (the proprietary Silk browser, which caches web pages to make them load faster), Photos and Docs (for documents you can store in the cloud or side-load onto the tablet).

A swipe down from just above the top of the screen reveals another, smaller menu, with access to rotation control, brightness, wireless, settings (in which the OS starts to look more like Android), May Day 24/7 video support and, now, Firefly

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

That’s right, Firefly is now part of the Kindle Fire HDX tablet and works almost exactly as it does on the Fire Phone. Find a product, point your tablet’s camera at it, tap the Firefly icon (there is no dedicated hardware button) and then watch as virtual fireflies swarm the product to identify it and then deliver an approximate price and where I can buy more of the product. There are at least 100,000 supported products, so it’s no surprise that when I used Firefly on a box of Crayola Crayons, it worked perfectly. It could not, however, identify a bottle of Poland Spring water.

Content companion:
Much of Amazon’s world revolves around content you can buy from them. One of my favorite things about Kindle Devices is how easy it is to see all the content (books, magazines, music, movies) I own in the cloud (where I have unlimited space for them) and what I have local. Downloading to the Kindle HDX 8.9 takes just a tap. The Wi-Fi-only device I tested supports 802.11ac and MIMO (mulitple-input, multiple-output) technology to speed uploads and downloads — just like the iPad Air.

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

Even though Apple offers much of this same content through iTunes, iBooks and movie downloads and rentals, it doesn’t seem to know as much about the content as Amazon. Amazon’s X-Ray technology takes you inside movies. It uses the IMDb database (which Amazon owns) to tell you, in real time, about every actor on screen (in movies that support it).

Similarly, in books, you can find out who every character is and how often and where they appear in book. Plus, now you can read Notable Clips to help you quickly get up to speed on a tome that you put down for a while or have to read fast. Of course, the results are a bit mixed. First of all, not every book supports it — and in some cases, the results are not particularly illuminating.

For example, it plucked out this gem from Dan Brown’s Inferno:

Her eyes, though a gentle brown, seemed unusually penetrating, as if they had witnessed a profundity of experience rarely encountered by a person her age.

As with all Amazon products, you get more not only by being a member of Amazon, but buy ponying up $99 a year to become an Amazon Prime Member. This gives you access to all of Amazon Prime Instant videos and growing slate of original content, the streaming music library, a half million books in the lending library, 2-day shipping and special deals. It’s well worth it.

Read Also: Oppo N3 Smart Phone Complete Specs


In general, the new Fire OS 4.0 smooths out the rough edges of OS 3, although not every change is welcome. I noticed, for example, that all slides (volume, brightness control, etc.), are now orange bars on top of bars instead of the smaller orange dot. The result is, I have trouble telling at a glance what level any of these things are set at. Amazon also added a lock PIN feature, which is useful for protecting your Kindle from prying eyes and children. However, if you want to turn it off, you have to disable all the child accounts you created.

There were also more than a few system hiccups like slow screen rotation and outright crashes including one while I was using the camera that took me all the way back to the boot screen.

Get it done:

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 Review

The halcyon days of the tablet market explosion may be over. Apple reported falling tablet sales over the last two quarters and Amazon has ceded much of its Android lead to Samsung. To fill in the gap, many tablet manufacturers are targeting business.

In addition to some very sexy slim tablets, Samsung has been hawking 12-inch office-friendly models. Apple presses the productivity angle more consistently than ever.

Amazon’s solution is to offer a new Bluetooth keyboard. For $59.99, you can turn the tablet into a mini laptop (more or less notebook sized). The keyboard is very thin and even includes a small trackpad. It's magnetized so it can stick to the back of the new Origami cover, also sold separately.

The leather version, which I tested, is $69.99. It also has extra space to accommodate the keyboard when the cover is folded closed on top of the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9. Of course, when you’re using it, you can have they keyboard a distance away from the tablet. I thought the keyboard was fine, but the keys did feel kind of cheap and the typing action felt less than solid. I prefer Microsoft’s sturdier, but quite light Universal Mobile Keyboard, even though it does not include a trackpad.

Read Aslo: Apple Retina 5K iMac review


Amazon doesn't have all of Microsoft Office (Microsoft Note is in the curated Amazon App Store), like the iPad does, but it does have the very effective Office Suite Pro. The keyboard and Origami case make the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 a somewhat more attractive productivity device, but it pales in comparison to, for example, Microsoft’s considerably more expensive Surface Pro 3, which offers a larger and better keyboard, bigger screen and a fully adjustable kickstand that makes it useable on the desk and on your lap.

A great deal:
At $379 for a 16GB Wi-Fi-only model, the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 costs $120 less than a comparably equipped iPad Air 2. There are caveats, like the fact that the iPad Air 2 includes biometric finger-print reading technology, but most people won’t miss the convenience of unlocking their tablet with a touch.

For those looking for a more budget-friendly device that doesn’t skimp on quality, features and performance, and one that offers better parental controls (actual accounts!) than the iPad, Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is a clear winner.

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 8.9:

Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9


The Good:
Attractive, light, yet sturdy design • Smart, easy-to-use interface • All the apps you need • Great price • Access to tons of awesome content.

The Bad:
Specs don’t add up to industry-leading performance • Software has some bugs • Optional keyboard feels cheap.

The Bottom Line:
The Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is a great tablet at an even greater price. It’s the clear choice for those turned off by Apple’s premium price points.

Amazon, Gadgets, Kindle, Kindle Fire HDX 8.9, Product Reviews, Tablets, Reviews.

Facebook Photo Upload Upgrade

Facebook Photo Upload Upgrade

Facebook Makes It Easier to Share Photos 'In the Moment'.

Facebook rolled out an update to its app on Monday that adds a new way to quickly organize and post small batches of photos from your smartphone.

Microsoft Office 365 Offers Unlimited Cloud Storage

Office 365 Cloud Storage

Microsoft's cloud-based Office platform just got a big upgrade: The company announced on Monday that Office 365 subscribers will soon have unlimited storage on OneDrive at no additional cost.

Google's New Inbox Invite Upgrade

Google's New Inbox Invite Upgrade

Google Inbox Users Can Now Invite Others to Join:


If you're still waiting for an invite to Inbox, Google's new app that rethinks email, we have good news: Just bug your friends who already have it.

The service, which is still in beta, rolled out to limited users on Wednesday. Users who emailed inbox@google.com could request an invitation, but only Google employees had the ability to invite others. But now, that's changed.

Nest's Smart Thermostat and Smoke Detector

Nest's Smart Smoke DetectorNest's Smart Thermostat and Smoke Detector Just Got Smarter

Smart Smoke Detector:

Nest Labs, which Google recently acquired for $3.2 billion, opened its smart Nest thermostat and smoke detector to developers in June to make more products work together in the home, from washing machines and garage doors to lights and cars.

Hackers Are using Microsoft PowerPoint to Hijack PC's

Powerpoint Hackers
Hackers Are Exploiting Microsoft PowerPoint to Hijack Computers

Powerpoint Hackers:

Hackers are exploiting a security flaw in Microsoft Office by using PowerPoint to attack Windows users and gain control of computer systems.

Android Smart Watches now have Offline Music Sync & GPS Support


Huge Android Wear Update Brings Offline Music Sync and GPS Support:


Android Smart Watches now have Offline Music Sync & GPS SupportIf we had to choose our biggest qualm about wearables today, apart from battery life, it would be the fact that most of them are nearly useless when away from your smartphone.

Now, in its first big update to Android Wear, Google addressed that issue, adding offline music syncing and GPS support.

Apple Now Alerts on iCloud Account Access

Apple Now Alerts on iCloud Account AccessYou know how Tim Cook said that Apple would start to improve iCloud security in the wake of those stolen celebrity nude photographs?

Well, it's already starting. As first spotted by Mac Rumors, Apple is now sending out email alerts to users when someone logs in to iCloud accounts from the web.

DropBox Pro Now Offers 1TB Cloud Storage

DropBox Pro Now Offers 1TB Cloud StorageThe cloud wars just got even more serious. Dropbox on Wednesday announced big changes to its Dropbox Pro offering, including more storage space and better sharing options.

The company's new pricing matches similar moves by Google and Microsoft and makes Dropbox Pro one of the cheapest ways to get a terabyte of storage, though still more expensive than Microsoft OneDrive for Business.

Google Plans to Separate Photos From Google+


Google Plans to Separate Photos From Google+
Google will soon be cleansing Google+ from another service, according to a new report.

Bloomberg reports the company is planning to make Google+ Photos a standalone service, which would mean a Google user wouldn't need a Google+ account to save and share photos with Google. Photos would also presumably have their own app and portal separate from Google+.


Is Facebook Interested in Fitness?

Facebook has its fingers in many pies, if not all of them.  From virtual reality to instant messaging and everything in between, the world’s best known social platform is ever expanding. The purchase of company after company has seen Facebook grow at an exponential rate.  But what is next for the company?

Well, it seems as though fitness may be on the list of things that Facebook want to accomplish in its career.  The firm has recently acquired the fitness app Moves.  This app helps the user monitor their daily physical activity and also their calorie count on a smartphone.

The app was developed by two-year-old Finnish startup, ProtoGeo.  The company announced on Thursday it had been bought by the social networking behemoth. As usual with Facebook’s acquirements, key members of the team would be moving to the Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California.  Interestingly no financial details of the Moves deal were made public.

Is Facebook Interested in Fitness? - Internet
Is Facebook Interested in Fitness?

Both firms have said that Moves would continue as a standalone application, rather than be integrated into framework of Facebook.  Users of Moves have been assured that “there are no plans to change that or commingle data with Facebook…the Moves team has built an incredible tool for the millions of people who want to better understand their daily fitness activity, and we’re looking forward to the app continuing to gain momentum,” Facebook has said in a recent statement.  Executives at Facebook have informed analysts in a conference call on Wednesday that they were resolute on building up their “ecosystem” of apps as a way to bring more users to the firm and then eventually locate more avenues for revenue via advertising or some other way.

As always, if you would like to leave a sensible comment, then please do so in the comments section below.

[Image via moves-app]

SOURCE: http://phys.org/news/2014-04-facebook-app.html

Rocket Internet and Ooredoo's Collaboration to Bring Investment to Pakistan


Rocket Internet, a German start-up incubator, has partnered with Ooredoo Q.S.C a Qatar based telecommunications provider to form ‘Asia Internet Holding’ and will jointly build and fund existing e-commerce startups especially those focused on mobile services.

This merger will benefit Rocket Internet’s ventures operating in Pakistan.

The collaboration is expected to bring in heavy foreign investment to Pakistan, especially through Rocket Internet’s most successful venture Kaymu (an online market place), which spearheads operations for the entire Asia region out of Pakistan.

Oliver Samwer, co-founder of Rocket Internet, commented, “We look forward to working with a partner as innovative and customer-centric as Ooredoo in Asia. Our Partnership will accelerate the development of Asia Internet Holding in the region and help our businesses succeed. We feel that by bringing e-commerce models that have worked well elsewhere in the World to Asia, and that by partnering with an operator like Ooredoo, we can jointly bring better services to customers.”

Commenting on the collaboration Ahmed Khan, MD Asia Kaymu.com said, “The investment is greatly based on the success already achieved in Pakistan. During investor presentations in Singapore and Indonesia, Pakistan was shown as the success story on which the potential of the region is gauged.”

Looking into the future, m-commerce seems to be hovering over every business horizon; and keeping that in mind this merger of e-commerce and m-commerce presents a lucrative business opportunity for both companies.

The business models are going to be more social and transactional, and with the commercial launch of 3G in Pakistan expected in the next few days this collaboration will benefit the country’s e-commerce in general.

Rocket Internet has worked tirelessly to maintain high quality standards and customer service support in order to build its reputation and brand name in the entire Asia Pacific region. With its unsurpassed success and reputation under the diligent leadership of Ahmed Khan, MD Asia for Kaymu.pk, Rocket Internet has not only managed to harness recognition but has also helped in realizing the enormous potential the e-commerce and digital industry in the region.

Online Advertisers Beware $10 Million Per Month Fraud Ring

The Internet is a dangerous place.  Sure there are LOL cats, epic fails and the occasional groundbreaking whistleblower, but there is also the darker side of the Internet.  To prove my point, not even the people who make lots of cash online, such as advertisers, can escape from the wrath of criminals.

Advertising software firm TubeMogul has recently uncovered a botnet fraud ring, which may be generating upwards of $10 million a month in fraudulent video views. The criminals are preying on advertisers such as electronics giant, Samsung and automobile manufacturer, Nissan.

Online Advertisers Beware $10 Million Per Month Fraud Ring - INternet
Online Advertisers Beware $10 Million Per Month Fraud Ring

Just like a traditional click-fraud network, this botnet works by hijacking computers with malware and then using them to generate false traffic for websites. That sound like a ‘normal’ scam, right? But this network is far more complicated.  It uses trickery to make a single computer generate traffic, which appears to come from thousands of different users. This network also targets ad cookie networks and visits other sites to establish an advertiser-friendly background for the counterfeit traffic.

TubeMogul has published a list of nearly 200 sites that were making cash from the botnet. Nearly all of these had inoffensive names such as ModernCommerce.com or AllSportsHub.com. Together, they add up to millions of false video views, often these are from major brands. As one TubeMogul analyst put it, “people are buying traffic they don’t know is bots.”

The team at TubeMogul still has not been able to ascertain who is behind the botnet, since the ring was careful to conceal its tracks.  TubeMogul expect advertisers to stay well away from the sites, now that the fraud has been uncovered.

As always, if you would like to leave a sensible comment, then please do so in the comments section below.

[Image via onyxdigital]

SOURCE: http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/18/5628028/10-million-a-month-fraud-ring-preys-on-online-advertisers

UK HMRC Plans To Share Tax Data

Under plans drawn up by Revenue & Customs (HMRC). Taxpayers’ personal data could be shared with private companies.  If the plans were indeed given the green light, it would then allow HMRC to release anonymous tax data to third parties.  These could include companies, public bodies and researchers.

Not everyone agrees with the idea.  Former Conservative minister David Davis informed the Guardian newspaper that the plans were “borderline insane”.  A spokesman for HMRC said that  ”no final decisions” had been taken, and that the HMRC was committed to “confidentiality”.  The Guardian newspaper reported that officials, suggesting that firms could pay to access the data, were examining “charging options”.

UK HMRC Plans To Share Tax Data - Internet
UK HMRC Plans To Share Tax Data

But concerns have been brought to people’s attention over the plans in the wake of the Care.data initiative (a proposed anonymous sharing of NHS medical records), which is currently in a suspended status, after suspicions were raised as to precisely what data would remain anonymous.

The initial plans to relax the laws regarding HMRC data sharing were first consulted on in July of last year.  Treasury minister David Gauke is overseeing the plans and HMRC has said that “further consultations” would also be taking place.

Mr Davis informed the Guardian: “The officials who drew this up clearly have no idea of the risks to data in an electronic age…Our forefathers put these checks and balances in place when the information was kept in cardboard files, and data was therefore difficult to appropriate and misuse…It defies logic that we would remove those restraints at a time when data can be collected by the gigabyte, processed in milliseconds and transported around the world almost instantaneously.”

Deputy director of civil rights campaign group, Big Brother Watch, Emma Carr said: “The ongoing claims about anonymous data overlook the serious risks to privacy of individual level data being vulnerable to re-identification…Given the huge uproar about similar plans for medical records, you would have hoped HMRC would have learned that trying to sneak plans like this under the radar is not the way to build trust or develop good policy.”

In response to this information, a HMRC spokesman said: “HMRC would only share data where this would generate clear public benefits, and where there are robust safeguards in place…Last year’s consultation made it very clear that there would be a rigorous accreditation process for anyone wanting access to the data and that any access would take place in a secure environment…Those accessing data would be subject to the same confidentiality provisions as HMRC staff, including a criminal sanction for unlawful disclosure of taxpayer information.”

What do you think?  Should this kind of sensitive information become available to persons other than whom you intended it for?  As always, if you would like to leave a sensible comment, then please do so in the comments section below.

[Image via telegraph]

SOURCE: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-27086401

Kidnapped French Boy Was Only A Facebook Creation

It’s no surprise to anyone anymore that people will do just about anything to get a few minutes of attention. Usually, the stunts are meaningless and don’t hurt anyone. And then sometimes, someone does something that makes no sense whatsoever and makes you wonder if there are more than a few bolts loose upstairs. Matters are made even worse when the person decides to involve innocent children in the mix.

Chayson Basinio, a 2-year-old boy in France, was recently reported missing by his great aunt. She told police she hadn’t seen him in close to a week and that he might’ve been kidnapped in the parking lot of a grocery store. Naturally, the police took this claim very seriously and began a frantic search for the boy. When no evidence whatsoever turned up for him, they started to get a little suspicious of the “aunt’s” story. They discovered that the supposed aunt and two minor children created a fake Facebook page for Chayson’s father, and that Chayson, as well as his father, only existed on the internet.

Kidnapped French Boy Was Only A Facebook Creation - Internet, WTF
Kidnapped French Boy Was Only A Facebook Creation

I have no idea what the woman’s motives for trying to pull off this hoax were. She has since been arrested for this “prank” and her true motives may soon come to light. While I’ve heard of some crazy hoaxes before, I can’t recall ever hearing something so perverse as this. When real children are actually missing all over the world, it takes someone special to send police on a manhunt for a Facebook creation.

What are your thoughts? Let us know in the comments section below.

[Image via Digital Trends]

SOURCE: http://www.cnet.com/news/polices-search-for-missing-boy-finds-he-existed-only-on-facebook/

Facebook Nearby Friends Track Feature

Facebook is introducing a new mobile feature called Nearby Friends.  It can tap into the steady stream of location information that your phone gives out, so your friends will be able to track each other and thereby know where they are, in real time.

This new feature will not be switched on by default.  Your Facebook friends will not be able to locate you, unless you decide the live-tracking feature is what you want.  To turn it on, all you have to do is head over to Facebook’s settings.  By making this new feature opt-in rather than auto on, it suggests Facebook has maybe learned from some of their previous errors regarding privacy problems.

Facebook Nearby Friends Track Feature - Internet
Facebook Nearby Friends Track Feature

The options for sharing your location details are varied; you can either share your general location with all your Facebook friends, just close friends or you can customize a list of people. It is interesting to note that your location is only shared with other friends who are using the feature as well and have chosen to share their location with you.

A push notification informs you of how many of your friends are nearby. If you open the app you see a list of friends, the area or town where they are and the distance they are from your current location.  Nearby Friends will be available on Facebook’s iOS and Android applications, but as the feature is new and is still in its early stages, it will only work at select locations.

Facebook Nearby Friends Track Feature - Internet
Facebook Nearby Friends Track Feature

There are other apps that already include features that let people “check-in” to locations, such as Instagram but those location features are slightly different because you decide when to share each specific location. If you do decide to turn on the new Nearby Friends feature, Facebook will start to collect data on your exact location and they store details on the locations where you have been in the past.  Of more of a concern is that the app also collects location information even when it is closed.  You are able to turn off the location history in the app’s settings. It is even possible to delete individual locations from your history also.

What do you think?  As always, if you would like to leave a sensible comment, then please do so in the comments section below.

[Image via occupycorporatism & businessinsider]

SOURCE: http://edition.cnn.com/2014/04/17/tech/mobile/facebook-nearby-friends/index.html?eref=mobiles_republic