Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Winzip 17 adds integration with Box cloud storage


Winzip has been a household name in file compression for two decades. WinZip 17 takes file compression and management to the cloud with Google Drive, SkyDrive, and Dropbox integration--and now a new update is available that adds Box to the mix.
WinZip was a pioneer of the freemium software business model--basically providing the software for free, and relying on the moral compass of customers to pay for the product if it proved to be useful to them. I used to download a wide variety of shareware applications following a similar strategy, but WinZip was the first one I ever felt compelled to actually pay for.
Over the years, hard drive and flash drives have grown exponentially in size, and the cost of storage has gone down, so the need for a file compression utility has declined. However, the rise of photos and videos--which can be massive files--and the desire to upload information to social networks or cloud storage services has brought it back in vogue. It's much easier and faster to upload a 100Mb file instead of a 1GB file.
WinZip has evolved to be a much more comprehensive file management tool than it once was. It still provides file compression, but now it also includes the ability to convert documents to PDF, add custom watermarks to PDF files, and post files directly to popular social networks.
Another advantage of WinZip 17 is that it ties disparate services together. Rather than dealing with your PC, Google Drive, Dropbox, SkyDrive, and Box as separate entities, WinZip 17 gives you a single tool from which to manage all of your data no matter where it's stored.
There are two flavors of WinZip 17, Standard and Pro. The Pro version includes features that strengthen and speed up file encryption, as well as the ability to view photos within a ZIP file without extracting them first, and features that make it easier to transfer and manage photos from supported cameras and mobile devices, among other things.
You can get WinZip 17 directly from the WinZip site starting at $30. WinZip 17 Pro is $50. WinZip offers volume licensing discounts for businesses that purchase the software in bulk. WinZip 17 is only available for Windows (XP or later), but there are versions available for Mac OS X, iOS, and Android as well.
Customers who already have WinZip 17 can download an update to add integration with Box cloud storage.

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Yahoo's Marissa Mayer looks to new products, mobile to restore company growth


Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer has identified new products and mobile investments as among several strategies aimed at keeping the company relevant as it tries to compete against the likes of Google and Facebook.
On Monday, Mayer highlighted recently revamped hiring protocols and product launches, such as its redesigned Flickr iOS app and Yahoo Mail, as positive steps for the company, though she stressed that "there's a lot of work still to be done." Mayer spoke on a conference call Monday to discuss the company's mixed results for the fourth quarter of 2012, which showed revenue up but profit down from a year earlier.
"Flickr and Yahoo Mail marked the start of these efforts," Mayer said.
Yahoo will focus on developing or redesigning roughly a dozen products in the months and years to come, each built around people's "daily digital habits," Mayer said.
She cited search, the homepage, finance, sports and news as areas the company would be focusing on, without giving more details.
Yahoo said its three key business challenges going forward are, in order of priority, increasing usage, growing its international presence and appealing to a broader set of users.
Mayer also said mobile products are "incredibly important to our strategy," and that the company is working to make them a substantial part of its business. As part of that effort, the company recently acquired the mobile recommendations app Stamped and the video chat broadcasting app OnTheAir. "This is a nascent source of revenue for us," Mayer said.
Though the company said it does not break out financial performance metrics for its mobile products individually, mobile adoption of Yahoo products grew to more than 200 million monthly unique users in the fourth quarter, the company reported.
Yahoo also reported on its progress toward having at least 50 percent of its engineering workforce dedicated to mobile. Though it is not there yet, the company hired 120 new employees with computer science degrees in the fourth quarter and allocated them largely to new mobile product areas, Mayer said.
Zach Miners covers social networking, search and general technology news for IDG News Service. Follow Zach on Twitter at @zachminers. Zach's e-mail address is zach_miners@idg.com

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Google publishes detailed maps of North Korea


Google has published detailed maps of North Korea, based on information entered by users via its online Map Maker tool.
The maps now include details about the ultra-secretive nation including highways and smaller roads, country borders, parks, schools and features such as an amusement park in Pyongyang, the capital. Most of the areas were blank previously, and the information supplements Google's existing satellite imagery of the country.
Google said in a blog entry that the new data was collected via its Map Maker software over several years. The company said that from now on, it will publish approved updates entered using the tool as part of its official Google Maps offering.
"While many people around the globe are fascinated with North Korea, these maps are especially important for the citizens of South Korea who have ancestral connections or still have family living there," wrote Jayanth Mysore, a Google product manager, in the blog.
Earlier this month, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt visited North Korea with his daughter and former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson. The U.S. government was negative about the trip, which was deemed a "personal" visit by the executive, coming just after North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket.
After the trip, Schmidt's daughter Sophie, posted details of the trip online in an account titled "It might not get weirder than this," with details including a visit to an electronic library at a university and Doritos for sale at a supermarket.
Map Maker is an online tool that Google uses to solicit map information from users about certain countries, with the goal of eventually adding it to the official version of Google Maps. The tool can be used to add features such as natural landscape, political boundaries, roads, railways and buildings, although the company usually does not immediately publish the data.
Users are currently able to add information on about 200 countries, which are often places where traditional map data is difficult to obtain. These include locations in many countries in Africa and central America, Afghanistan, Iraq, and even Antarctica.

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Pentagon to add thousands of new cybersecurity jobs


The Pentagon is planning to expand its cyber security force nearly five fold over the next several years in a bid to bolster its defensive and offensive computer capabilities.
The plan is to add about 4,000 more troops and civilians to the existing 900 personnel in the Defense Department's Cyber Command, the Washington Post reported today citing several unnamed sources.
The planned expansion is in response to growing threats against critical U.S. assets in cyberspace, a defense official told Computerworld on Monday.
"As Secretary Panetta stated in his cyber speech last October, we are faced with an increasing threat of a cyber attack that could be as destructive as the terrorist attack on 9/11," the official said. "The department recognizes this growing danger and is working with a sense of urgency to put the right policies and structures in place to enable us to carry out our role."p>
The official said the Department of Defense (DoD) will work closely with U.S. Cyber Command and the Combatant Commands to develop an "optimum force structure" for dealing with emerging cyber threats.
The goal is to create three separate types of cyber forces each tasked with specific roles and responsibilities. The cyber force structure will include Cyber National Mission Forces, Cyber Combat Mission Forces and Cyber Protection Forces, the official noted.
The national force and cyber protect force will focus on addressing threats to critical infrastructure targets and DoD networks respectively. Meanwhile, the combat mission force will be responsible for planning and executing offensive operations and attacks in cyberspace.
"While the basic cyber force structure model is clear, the implementation plan to achieve it is still being developed and is pre-decisional at this time," the official said.
The planned expansion comes amid heightening concerns about U.S. vulnerabilities in cyber space. Many believe that the U.S. is already in the midst of an undeclared and mostly unseen cyberwar directed against it by unfriendly nation states and well-funded highly organized criminal gangs and hactivist groups.
Countries like China and Russia are well ahead of the U.S. in terms of having cyber forces of the kind that the Pentagon is trying to build up, said Alan Paller, director of research at the SANS Institute. The challenge for the DoD will be to find enough qualified cybersecurity professionals to meet its ambitious expansion plans, he said.
"The key to putting the 4,000 in perspective is that every other critical part of the economy also needs the same people -- banks, power companies, telecom, defense contractors, civilian and state government and hospitals."
But while the hunger for cybersecurity professionals with advanced skills is very real, the supply line is near empty, he said. If the DoD wants to meet its expansion goals it will have to find innovative ways to find talent, Paller said.
He pointed to a recently launched program called Cyber Corps Challenge by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie as an example of the kind of approach the DoD needs to take to find talent. Under the program, the state invited veterans of the U.S armed services and others to take part in a competition for spots in a community college-based cyber security program and six month residencies at banks, the FBI and other organizations.
"China has been running competitions and training programs that work well in every ... district since at least 2003," Paller said. "Russia set up its first advanced school in 1994. We are way behind in quantity and quality."
Jaikumar Vijayan covers data security and privacy issues, financial services security and e-voting for Computerworld. Follow Jaikumar on Twitter at @jaivijayan or subscribe to Jaikumar's RSS feed. His e-mail address is jvijayan@computerworld.com.
Read more about cybercrime and hacking in Computerworld's Cybercrime and Hacking Topic Center.

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Startup NetCitadel aims to orchestrate security management controls in virtualized nets


Startup NetCitadel today launched with a product called OneControl intended to automate what might otherwise be manual research and changes related to configuring firewalls, switches or other gear when virtual-machine (VM) workloads are spun up or down in enterprise data centers or cloud environments.
"We're helping enterprises go from manual processing that's time-consuming to show automated responses to network events," says Mike Horn, co-founder and CEO of NetCitadel, about the purpose of the OneControl virtual appliance. Used in data centers, it can automate determinations about firewall, router and switch settings based on the preferred corporate security policy relative to VM-based workloads, eliminating the need for an administrator to manually research it.
Horn says OneControl can be installed to work with the various VM platforms, including VMware, Xen and Hyper-V. In a VMware-based environment, it can work with VMware's vDirector and vCloud APIs "to map the intelligence of the virtual device," says Horn, noting OneControl keeps track of the VM resource pool and related information such as IP addresses to determine what changes might need to be made to network firewalls, switches or routers to conform to security policy.
Available for about $25,000, the product competes against similar security-policy management and orchestration offerings from Cisco and Juniper. The idea is when VM workloads are moved around, OneControl can immediately advise on changes that need to be made to gear that today includes certain Cisco and Juniper routers, switches, firewalls and security gateways. A typical question it's designed to answer is, "If vMotion happens inside a network, how does that impact firewall devices?" says Horn. In the future, NetCitadel plans to bring intelligence about other gear, such as load balancers, into the equation as well.
OneControl can be deployed in either the enterprise network or cloud services, though the main testing so far has been toward supporting the Amazon AWS cloud, says Horn.
OneControl has been in early adoption for about five months at Kenettek, the Broken Arrow, Okla.-based managed services and data center provider which serves the oil and gas industry, among others. Almost the entire Kenettek data center is virtualized, says Ken Dobbins, service manager there, noting that OneControl is saving a huge amount of time in configuring services in routers and firewalls when new VM server clusters are spun up or otherwise changed for customers.
OneControl immediately provides security-policy directions to the Kenettek help desk staff rather than requiring they research how the VM-based change will impact security policy-based configurations related to firewalls and routers. This not only saves a huge amount of time, but it's turning out that it also saving on VMware licensing charges which are now based on "committed RAM per hour," says Dobbins. In the energy sector where data related to SCADA controls is collected during certain peak hours, it makes a difference, he points out.
NetCitadel, based in Mountain View, was founded in 2010 by Horn with Theron Tock, CTO, and Vadim Kurland. The company has received an undisclosed amount of funding from New Enterprise Associates.
Ellen Messmer is senior editor at Network World, an IDG publication and website, where she covers news and technology trends related to information security. Twitter: @MessmerE. Email: emessmer@nww.com.
Read more about wide area network in Network World's Wide Area Network section.

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Friday, January 18, 2013

Amazon rolls out iOS-optimized MP3 store


Watch your back, iTunes: Amazon's now in the game of selling digital music to iOS users. The retail giant has optimized its store to let owners of iPhones and iPod touches browse and purchase from its 22-million song catalog.
To sidestep Apple's rules about taking 30 percent of purchases, though, Amazon's store isn't available via a native app, but rather in a Web interface that iOS users can access via Safari atwww.amazon.com/mp3. The interface is optimized for Apple's handheld devices, complete with a black-and-orange aesthetic that is strangely reminiscent of iOS's Music app.
That optimization also lets Amazon offer common touch controls, like the ability to quickly swipe through carousels of songs and albums, much as you can in iOS's iTunes Store app. Tapping on a play button next to a song plays a 30 second preview, which plays in the background as you browse (though if you do anything to cause the browser to load a new page, you'll cut off the song). As on the iTunes Store, tapping once on the price of a song or album will turn it into a Buy button that you must tap again, at which point you'll be prompted to enter your Amazon credentials.
"And then what?" you're probably wondering. Unlike the iTunes Store, Amazon has no direct access to your iOS device's Music library. Amazon sidesteps again here, loading your purchases directly into yourAmazon Cloud Player, which you can access via the Web or the company's Cloud Player app. And because you purchased that music from Amazon, it doesn't count against your Cloud Player storage limit.
Amazon's been careful to provide most of the features you'd expect from a store, including autocomplete options in the search field, bestseller lists, personalized recommendations, and customer ratings. One thing I did find lacking from my browsing experience was the ability to seamlessly preview all songs on an album.
The ability to purchase music directly from your iOS device has clearly been a missing part of Amazon's digital music strategy--with it in place, the company's Cloud Player offerings become even more attractive to iOS users looking to comparison shop, or simply to get their music from someplace that isn't iTunes.

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Intel sales, profits slide for 2012, but data center business growing


Intel saw its sales and profits drop in 2012 as the company was hit by slower demand for personal computers and its continued inability to make it big in the smartphone and tablet markets, although its data center business continued to grow.
The world's biggest chip maker reported revenue of US$53.3 billion for the year, down 1.2 percent compared with 2011, and posted net income of $11 billion, down 15 percent. Full-year revenue from its PC client division, which accounts for more than half its revenue, fell 3 percent year-on-year.
Intel also reported its fourth-quarter results on Thursday. Revenue slipped 3 percent and net income was down 26 percent from the final quarter of 2011, and while earnings per share slipped from $0.64 to $0.48, they were $0.03 above a consensus estimate from analysts polled by Thomson Financial.
The root of Intel's PC client problems lies in the declining market for PCs, where it has traditionally been the market leader, and the rise in popularity of tablet computers, where it faces much stronger competition.
Worldwide PC shipments fell 5 percent in the last three months of the year compared to the same period of 2011, according to an estimate from Gartner. The market amounted to 90.1 million units, it said.
Much of the drop is being blamed on tablet computers, which rather than emerging as a new class of machine that takes a place in the home between smartphones and PCs, is becoming a replacement for a PC, said Gartner.
In the tablet market, Intel faces competition from companies like chip makers relying on chip designs from competitor ARM.
However, Intel's data center business recorded better results. Sales rose 6 percent to $10.7 billion as demand for its server chips climbed.
"We made tremendous progress across the business in 2012 as we entered the market for smartphones and tablets, worked with our partners to reinvent the PC, and drove continued innovation and growth in the data center," said Paul Otellini, Intel president and CEO, in a statement.
"As we enter 2013, our strong product pipeline has us well positioned to bring a new wave of Intel innovations across the spectrum of computing," he said.
For the coming year, Intel said it expects to see sales rise in the low single-digit percent range.
Some of the company's hopes for 2013 stem from new chips it plans to release for laptops, tablets, and smartphones, Otellini said in a conference call with analysts.
"Looking ahead, I am exited about a strong pipeline of products coming to market," he said.
Intel plans to launch its Haswell chip in the first half, a new laptop processor that will deliver "the largest generation-to-generation battery life improvement in Intel's history," said Otellini. The executive said the new chip should help its PC partners produce thinner and lighter computers with longer battery life.
It also expects to see more Intel-based tablets shipping beyond the 10 that are already available. And the number of smartphones based on Intel chips will expand beyond the seven devices currently available, said Otellini.
Intel's new chips will be "extremely competitive with ARM designs," he said.
Intel also plans to launch its first Xeon and Atom chips produced on its leading-edge 22-nanometer manufacturing process targeted at the data center market.
Those new chips should return the data center group to double-digit percentage growth this year, Intel CFO Stacy Smith said during the conference call.
In after-hours trading, the company's stock on the Nasdaq was trading at around $21.60 per share at the time of this report, down from its close at $22.68.
Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address ismartyn_williams@idg.com

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'Make me Asian' app yanked from Google Play amidst racism concerns


An app called "Make me Asian" that added details like narrowed eyes and conical hats to screenshots of users has been pulled from the Google Play store after inciting widespread public outrage, including a Change.org petition that was signed by more than 8,400 supporters.
"Make me Asian," along with the similarly offensive "Make me Indian," which featured things like feathers and war paint, are gone as of today. Their creator was listed as KimberyDeiss, who apparently had a large number of "Make me ..." apps on the Play store, according to AppBrain. That developer page appears to be down as well.
Peter Chin, a Washington, D.C., pastor and the organizer of the Change.org petition, celebrated the deletion of the apps, telling NPR, "I am deeply thankful to those who realized the danger of these stereotypes entering the mainstream and spoke out against this app, [b]ut I am also appreciative of Google, who listened to our concerns and acted accordingly."
However, it took some time before Google acted in this case -- Chin first blogged about the app in mid-November, and the intervening months saw a Twitter campaign and the aforementioned petition have no effect on the Play store until today.
Somewhat strangely an avowedly progressive company, Google has been at the center of the occasional sociopolitical controversy of late. Iris, the Android platform's ostensible answer to Apple's Siri, was hammered for early versions that provided stridently right-wing answers to some queries in early 2012. That, of course, was after Siri itself came under fire from pro-choice activists for apparently being hesitant to direct users to Planned Parenthood locations. (For the record, both apps have been updated to be less controversial.)
Email Jon Gold at jgold@nww.com and follow him on Twitter at @NWWJonGold.
Read more about anti-malware in Network World's Anti-malware section.

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Three reasons Facebook Graph Search is good for business


Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a plan this week to make all of the Likes, check-ins, and photo tags on Facebook actually mean something with the launch of Graph Search. The service is in early beta, and is not yet widely available, but the concept has some valuable implications for businesses on Facebook.
Here are three ways that small and medium businesses can benefit from Facebook Graph Search:
1. Engagement
Facebook is already the online destination where users spend the most time. One report from May of 2012 suggests that users spend nearly 8 hours per month on average perusing Facebook--more than double the amount of time spent on the next closest rival. Facebook also has nearly a billion registered users, and boasts around 150 million unique visitors per month.
So, what do all of these stats mean to you, and what does it all have to do with Graph Search? First, the data underscores the value of Facebook as a platform for connecting with and engaging customers. It's the place to be online, and the people who use it spend a lot of time there. Graph Search is going to give Facebook users even more reason to stay enmeshed in the social network. Queries that people might normally switch over to Google or Bing for, they'll now conduct from within Facebook in order to get responses that are more relevant to them personally.
2. Research
Facebook already represents a massive global repository of valuable marketing data. Companies have spent the past few years trying to grasp how to leverage Facebook Pages, Likes, and other nuances of the social network in order to connect with customers and gain some tactical advantage over competitors.
Graph Search gives businesses a powerful new tool for mining market research data from Facebook. A search of users who Like the company Facebook Page and live in a given area will be instrumental in allocating resources where they can have the most impact. With a little creativity in the queries, a business can learn all sorts of useful correlations that paint a more complete picture of who their customers are, and what they like.
3. Marketing
Facebook Ads already enable targeting on a fairly granular level based on a wide variety of attributes. You can distribute ads by location, age, gender, interests, and more.
Just as cyber criminals can use the power of Facebook Graph Search to pinpoint potential phishing attack victims with greater precision, legitimate businesses can also target marketing efforts to a more exact audience. Granted, Graph Search has some privacy controls built in, so the results for a business doing market research would be based primarily on information that users have shared with the general public--but many users are unaware of the security controls, are too lazy to use them, or simply don't care, so there's plenty of valuable information to be found there.

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Nokia Lumia 820 owners can customize their phone with 3D printers


Nokia is embracing the 3D printing community by releasing files that will let smartphone users create their own custom shells.
Owners of its Lumia 820 smartphone will be the first to have the opportunity, the company said in a blog post on Friday.
The move is mostly about marketing, as Nokia looks for ways to make its products stand out, according to Malik Saadi, principal analyst with Informa Telecoms & Media.
The Lumia 820 was announced last September. It uses an interchangeable shell that allows users to wirelessly charge their device and choose between a number of colors, which now can be expanded upon with the option to print custom shells.
For people who want to design their own shells Nokia is releasing 3D templates, case specs, recommended materials and best practices. Mechanical drawings in either STL or STP file formats can be downloaded from the company's developer website. The printed shells cannot be sold, as the licensing only allows for non-commercial use.
Once confined to prototyping and niche curiosity, 3D printing has started to take off thanks to products from companies such as MakerBot Industries, Stratasys and 3D Systems and services such as Sculpteo, which allows users to upload a file and then prints it for them.
Send news tips and comments to mikael_ricknas@idg.com

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'Aaron's Law' could have unintended consequences


The suicide of Internet wunderkind Aaron Swartz has prompted a variation on the classic "there-ought-to-be-a-law" response to tragedy. In this case, it's, "There ought to be an amendment to the law," to prevent what critics have called overzealous prosecution and vastly disproportionate sentencing guidelines.
The law in this case is the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), invoked by federal prosecutors to bring a 13-count indictment against Swartz, 26, after he used the MIT computer network to download more than 4 million academic articles from the online archive JSTOR, allegedly without legal authorization, in violation of MIT's terms of service.
U.S. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) filed a bill this week she called "Aaron's Law," that would exclude terms of service violations from the CFAA and wire fraud statutes. In a post on Reddit, the Internet forum that Swartz cofounded, Lofgren wrote that "using the law in this way could criminalize many everyday activities and allow for outlandishly severe penalties.
"A simple way to correct this dangerous legal interpretation is to change the CFAA and the wire fraud statutes to exclude terms of service violations," she wrote.
But several Internet security experts, while expressing sympathy for Swartz's family, say it is not so simple, and that Lofgren's proposal could end up being yet another example of the law of unintended consequences.
[Bill Brenner in Salted Hash: I support 'Aaron's Law' -- for now]
Jody Westby, an attorney and CEO of Global Cyber Risk, said Swartz's death could be blamed on overly zealous prosecution "that crushed a young man." But she said that the proposed amendment to the CFAA "is another form of overkill that would have terribly detrimental consequences."
"[The CFAA language regarding terms-of-service violations]Ã'Â is absolutely essential in arresting insiders who steal or misuse confidential or proprietary data they were not given access to, and also criminals who hack into computers or plant malware to steal credentials or exfiltrate data," Westby said.
Randy Sabett, an attorney with ZwillGen and an expert in information security and intellectual property, said: "To isolate this law as the showpiece cause of a terrible tragedy, and therefore wipe out an entire remedy for criminal activity and intent is not the way to go."
Swartz, the founder and director of Demand Progress, co-author of RSS and a former research fellow at Harvard's Center for Ethics, was an outspoken crusader for making information free on the Internet, and prosecutors say he had planned to make the articles he obtained available to the public for free, as a political statement about access to knowledge.
He was scheduled to go to trial in April, and could have faced as many as 35 years in prison and as much as $1 million in fines, although the U.S. Attorney's office had reportedly offered a plea bargain that would have resulted in six months of jail time.
However, since his death, U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz has faced a firestorm of criticism, including a petition demanding her removal, which this week reached 25,000 signatures, however the White House has increased the theshold for a response from 25,000 to 100,000 petitions.Ã'Â
Marcia Hofmann, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), said in a blog post earlier this week that the CFAA is indeed badly flawed. "The government should never have thrown the book at Aaron for accessing MIT's network and downloading scholarly research," she wrote. "However, some extremely problematic elements of the law made it possible."
One of them is that the law doesn't clearly define what "authorization" to access protected computers means, she wrote. "Creative prosecutors have taken advantage of this confusion to craft criminal charges that aren't really about hacking a computer but instead (to) target other behavior the prosecutors don't like," she said, adding that a second major problem is that sentences for hacking crimes are far too severe.
Westby said there might be a need for the law's language to be more precise, and for sentencing guidelines to be adjusted. She suggested that Lofgren's bill should, "serve as a basis for Congressional hearings on what guidelines exist for prosecutors in handling CFAA cases."
But she said simply exempting terms-of-service violations from criminal penalties would be disastrous. "It would leave all businesses, individuals, and governments unable to use the CFAA to prosecute cybercriminals in circumstances where the perpetrator was violating terms of use, contractual obligations, or company policies."
"I do not say this with a hard heart. I lost a very close friend who committed suicide over extreme prosecutorial conduct over a relatively minor securities violation," she said. "What happened is that four boys lost their father. There are bounds of decency in prosecutorial conduct and certainly looking at damage should be a factor."
Sabett said if the penalties are indeed disproportionate, that is what should be changed. "Change the remedies," he said. "But don't wipe out a whole provision of the law. Any deterrent effect it would have against criminals would no longer exist."
A terrible tragedy should not eliminate the ability to bring charges for criminal behavior, he said. "Even if you say you're doing it for the common man -- that it is OK because it is for the greater good -- if it is a crime, then it is still a crime."
Read more about access control in CSOonline's Access Control section.

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Tech hotshots: The rise of the UX expert


Roberto Masiero vividly remembers the moment in 2011 when it became clear to him that designing a mobile application was a considerably different effort than designing a desktop application.
As head of the innovation labs for ADP, the $10 billion payroll services firm, he managed the engineering team tasked with creating ADP Mobile, the company's version of its human capital management application for mobile devices.
"We started out with a list of 100 features that we thought were awesome," Masiero remembers, but his team's enthusiasm ran smack into the collective disdain of the user experience designers they'd brought in from an outside agency, who deemed feature after feature irrelevant for mobile users, arguing that so many options would just confuse them.
By the time the designers were done, they had whittled the list of features down by 80%. "Their message was simple," says Masiero. "Less is more." In a mobile application, it is better to cleanly provide the 20 most important pieces of information than force people to navigate through 100 that they might never use. "We learned that you have to drop completeness in the name of usefulness."
What's more, Masiero, like a lot of other tech leaders, realized that in this age of mobility and user-driven technology, IT shops that don't have a user experience expert onboard need to get serious about begging, borrowing or stealing one -- an increasingly difficult proposition.
Developers with user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) expertise are hot these days, according to Shane Bernstein, managing director of QConnects, a Culver City, Calif.-based digital recruitment firm. And it's a fairly recent phenomenon, he says. Between 2010 and 2011, QConnects saw a 25% increase in the number of requests for UX designers; between 2011 and 2012, the increase was 70%.
Salaries are going up as well. Recruiters cite starting salaries ranging from $70,000 to $110,000, with the upper end hitting $150,000 and up. The Creative Group, a division of Robert Half Technology that specializes in design, marketing and interactive talent, began tracking UX designers separately in its annual salary survey in 2011. Salaries went up 6.2% in 2012 and it expects another 4.8% increase in 2013.
"And be prepared for a local variance factor," says Donna Farrugia, executive director of The Creative Group. "If you live between San Francisco and San Jose, add 30%."
Thanks to Apple, users expect perfection
In design parlance, the user interface (UI) is what the user sees; the user experience (UX) is how the application behaves. Both recruiters and practitioners stress that designers need to know the latter as much as the former. That is, they need to concentrate not only on how a design looks, but on the whole "wireframe" of the application, and where their requests are going into the back-end of the system.
What's driving the demand for such skills? Many people in the industry lay the credit -- or perhaps blame -- on Apple, with its near-fetishistic attention to how design, hardware and interface intersect. "Now people expect everything they interface with to have the ease of use of the iPhone," says Matt Miller, CTO of Irvine, Calif.-based technical recruiting firm CyberCoders.
"Apple forces everybody to match their aesthetic," agrees Masiero. "The image of your brand is at stake in your mobile application now. Companies that have great design, whether they're a restaurant chain or a car manufacturer, have a more valuable brand," and the same standards apply internally, he says.
Moreover, as mobile computing explodes, a company's client base becomes both broader and more demanding of a consumer-like product experience. As Masiero notes, 10 years ago his company's sole target audience was the human resources department. That's no longer true.
"With mobile devices becoming ubiquitous, we have to serve 30 million users, from somebody on a construction site to an airline pilot to a hotel manager. And you have to create a design so that the experience is accessible to everyone, while still providing them with a sense of uniqueness," he says.
High tech, high touch
With design at the forefront of everyone's mind, UX experts are suddenly in high demand and short supply. One reason they're hard to find is that the position spans multiple disciplines: design, programming and human behavior. "When you find that person, let me know," jokes Masiero.
"We do a little bit of market research, a little bit of psychology. We're synthesizers, pulling bits and pieces of different methodologies together," says UX designer Whitney Quesenberry, who runs her own agency in High Bridge, N.J. and has done work for Novartis, Siemens, Dow Jones and Eli Lilly among other companies. "UX is like programming -- there's not just one job involved."
Why UX designers love their jobs
The job description is amorphous and challenging -- to understand a given app's interface requirements, user experience context and back-end machinations. But the pay is mighty attractive -- between $70,000 and $110,000 to start, recruiters say -- and the perks associated with a UX (user experience) position sound like the halcyon days of the Internet boom: stock options, signing bonuses, flexible work hours.
One recruiter reported seeing one company offering liquor in its vending machines, and one employer offered designers unlimited time off (in return for results, of course).
And UX designers themselves say there are other, intangible benefits to the position. "Money only takes you so far," says Michael Beasley, a designer for Internet marketing agency Pure Visibility in Ann Arbor, Mich. "The work has to be interesting, not the same things over and over again. I like having fresh problems to tackle and the feeling that I'm making a difference for our clients."
Whitney Quesenberry, a UX designer who runs her own agency in High Bridge, N.J., says, "The real perk is meaningful work. Why would anybody want to work on something where you spend the first six months writing about requirements and the next six arguing about them?"
Quesenberry's advice for becoming a highly prized designer with both technical depth and design breadth? Check out one of the multiple masters' programs, such as the one at the University of Michigan, aimed at people already in the workforce, or talk your way onto one of the hybrid design teams that are becoming more prevalent within IT departments and learn all you can.
The Creative Group's Farrugia insists that the more cross-disciplined a designer is, the better, with the ability to combine good design and layout background with technology skills encompassing HTML coding and JavaScript. "The ideal is this hybrid person who's both right-brained and left-brained, high tech and high touch."
That pretty closely describes Michael Beasley, a designer for Internet marketing agency Pure Visibility in Ann Arbor, Mich. He got a BA in both English and music from the University of Michigan, and then stayed to get his masters' degree in Human-Computer Interaction from its School of Information in 2005.
"That's where I got my approach to interface design," Beasley says. "The multidisciplinary approach taught me design, human cognition and usability principles and methods. I also got a good understanding of how organizations work and information flows. That made me a pretty well-rounded person."
That kind of background sits well with IT managers like Masiero, for whom good design goes deeper than rounded corners on icons. "I want you to be a wizard of understanding the mental model of the user and translating that into the behavior of the application. You have to always think about making the user comfortable, about not creating any friction between what the user expects to happen and what the application expects from the user."
"Designers who understand human interaction are one step ahead of everyone else," agrees Farrugia. "They are rare and precious commodities."
Grow your own UX team?
With so much in the business world dependent on the success of mobile applications these days, most companies feel they can't forego development until colleges or vocational schools churn out more graduates with the ideal mix of design and coding sensibilities.
In the meantime, they cope by forming multidisciplinary teams to stand in for one perfect UX expert. "A designer might not be able to program, but they should be able to have a reasonable conversation with a programmer so they understand the impact of a design decision," says Quesenberry.
Farrugia has seen these hybrid design teams form more frequently over the past few years. "We've been coaching people in the design world to learn interaction and Web and digital skills, so they've been adding to their portfolio. Vice versa, people on the technical side are interacting more frequently with the front-end team to understand usability, personas and usage scenarios."


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EU Commissioner Kroes won't be bullied on net neutrality, says spokesman


Europe's digital agenda commissioner will not succumb to pressure on the issue of net neutrality, her spokesman said via Twitter on Friday.
In response to allegations by digital rights organization La Quadrature du Net that Commissioner Neelie Kroes had caved in to telecoms operators and was giving up on net neutrality, her spokesman Ryan Heath tweeted, "anyone thinking @NeelieKroesEU would let herself be bullied into diff opinions by any company/NGO, well, that just isn't her #NetNeutrality".
In her blog on Thursday, Kroes said consumers should be free to make their own choices about their Internet subscriptions, but that this "does not preclude consumers from subscribing to more differentiated, limited Internet offers, possibly for a lower price."
La Quadrature du Net interpreted this to mean that "Kroes supports the creation of a fragmented Internet, banning innovation and opening the door to unacceptable censorship."
"By deliberately ignoring that such offers would change almost nothing for operators in terms of cost, but would allow them to avoid investing in the development of network capacity while restraining possibilities for citizen participation, Neelie Kroes takes into account only short-term private interests that run contrary to public interest," the organization said in a press statement.
Kroes responded in an emailed statement, saying: "Make no mistake: I am in favor of an open Internet and maximum choice. That must be protected. But you don't need me or the E.U. telling you what sort of Internet services you must pay for."
The Commissioner had pointed out that opting for blocking ads or requesting privacy via do-not-track mechanisms "may mean you don't get access to content for free."
"The Internet does not run on its own. The network, content and Internet access all have to be paid for by someone. Many smaller web operators exist on the basis of innovative advertising models. There are various ways consumers pay for content, including by viewing advertisements before or during their access to content. Businesses should accept that different consumers will have different preferences, and design services accordingly," Kroes said.
Follow Jennifer on Twitter at @BrusselsGeek or email tips and comments to jennifer_baker@idg.com.

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Megaupload successor to offer 50GB free storage


A year to the day after his Megaupload sites were shuttered by the U.S. Department of Justice for copyright infringement, Kim Dotcom unveiled plans for a new file-sharing site offering 50GB of free space to members.
Dotcom posted the announcement on Twitter this week, saying that he also hopes to transfer all data from his defunct Megaupload site to the new site, Mega. Mega will be listed under the New Zealand-based domain Mega.co.nz
In his initial tweets, Dotcom wrote that it will have "very generous limits for free users. For example you get 50GB storage for free ;-)."
Dotcom plans to launch Mega on Jan. 20 during a news conference.
Dotcom posted screenshots of the new service on Twitter, showing a file tree-style user interface.
Mega screenshot
The free storage being offered by Mega far exceeds that offered by other current online consumer cloud storage and file-sharing sites such as Dropbox, Carbonite, Google Drive and Microsoft's SkyDrive, which offer from 2GB to 7GB of free capacity on signup.
Additionally, Dotcom tweeted that he is working with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) in court in the hopes of being able to migrate data from his defunct Megaupload site to the new Mega site.
Mega screenshot
Mega was initially announced in October 2012. At that time, the DOJ filed an opposing motion, andindicated that a new file-sharing site might violate the terms of Dotcom's bail, meaning he could face new criminal charges.
Lucas Mearian covers storage, disaster recovery and business continuity, financial services infrastructure and health care IT for Computerworld. Follow Lucas on Twitter at @lucasmearian or subscribe to Lucas's RSS feed. His e-mail address is lmearian@computerworld.com.
Read more about cloud storage in Computerworld's Cloud Storage Topic Center.

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