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Gransnet launches local service

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 09 April 2013 | 23.43

8 April 2013 Last updated at 05:58 ET

The website Gransnet, an online community for the over-50s, is launching a series of local sites.

The new service has received money from the Nominet Trust, a charity which funds technology projects with a social purpose.

So far 20 "local editors", all aged over 50 themselves, have been recruited by the site.

Ofcom figures suggest that 7.5 million UK adults have never been online, and two fifths of those are aged over 75.

"Many older people in the UK are still not online, leaving them potentially isolated and at a disadvantage," said Martha Lane Fox, the UK's Digital Champion.

Baroness Lane-Fox said she hoped the local Gransnet service, which will contain information about events, classes, volunteering opportunities and other activities relevant to specific areas, would offer an incentive for more older people to get online.

The first wave of areas to receive the local service includes Blackburn, Edinburgh, Oxfordshire and Worthing, but "anonymous locals" have already started their own versions in Lancashire, Warwickshire, Exeter, Kent, Leeds and Liverpool, according to Gransnet.

"Our members have already started meeting up of their own accord and local sites will make that much easier," said Gransnet founder Geraldine Bedell.

"Occasionally in the past our members have admitted to sometimes feeling lonely... Gransnet Local will extend the support and friendship we offer online into meet-ups and will provide a forum to discuss everything that's going on locally."

Author Kathy Lette, TV presenter Judy Finnegan and actor Timothy Spall are among the high-profile names who have contributed to the Gransnet website.

Recent popular discussion topics include "does sexual fidelity matter?" and "large families", and some of the responses do highlight generational differences.

"I know of a woman who discovered that her husband was being unfaithful because she realised that someone was darning his socks," is the current "quote of the week".


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Skype trojan forces Bitcoin mining

8 April 2013 Last updated at 06:51 ET

A trojan that can hijack a computer and force it into mining for Bitcoins - the virtual currency - has been spreading via Skype.

Antivirus firm Kaspersky Labs said attackers sent messages in various languages translating to "this my favourite picture of you".

The message included a malicious link which was, at its peak, being accessed more than 2,000 times every hour.

The value of Bitcoin has grown massively in recent weeks.

At the time of writing, Bitcoin exchange website Mt Gox has the currency listed as being worth $186 (£121).

CPU abuse

Unlike other currencies, Bitcoins are not issued by a central bank or other centralised authority.

Instead users are rewarded in a process called "mining", in which coins are issued to a user when they solve a complicated mathematical problem using their computer.

The trojan hijacks a victim's machine and makes it mine for Bitcoins on the attacker's behalf. The greater the number of machines mining, the quicker coins will be harvested.

"Most of the potential victims live in Italy then Russia, Poland, Costa Rica, Spain, Germany, Ukraine and others," wrote Dmitry Bestuzhev from Kaspersky Labs in a blog post.

The attack "dropper" originates from a server in India, but once installed transmits information back to a control centre in Germany, Mr Bestuzhev wrote.

The trojan is able to carry out many tasks, he added, but taking over computers for Bitcoin mining appears to be its primary function.

"It abuses the CPU of infected machines to mine Bitcoins for the criminal.

"The campaign is quite active. If you see your machine is working hard, using all available CPU resources, you may be infected."


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Wikileaks publishes 1.7m US records

8 April 2013 Last updated at 09:08 ET

Wikileaks has published more than 1.7 million US diplomatic and intelligence reports from the 1970s.

They include allegations that former Indian PM Rajiv Gandhi was a middleman in an arms deal and the first impressions of eventual British PM Margaret Thatcher.

The documents have not been leaked and are available to view at the US national archives.

Wikileaks says it is releasing the documents in searchable form.

Much of the work has been carried out by the website's founder Julian Assange while he has been holed up at the Ecuadorean embassy in London.

Mr Assange took refuge in the embassy last June to avoid extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over allegations that he sexually assaulted two female ex-Wikileaks supporters in 2010.

He denies the allegations, and has said they are politically motivated and part of a smear campaign against him and his whistle-blowing website.

Continue reading the main story

If anyone had been wondering what Julian Assange was doing inside the Ecuadorean embassy in London, we now have at least part of the answer. The new release of 1.7 million documents is larger in size than the 250,000 diplomatic cables he became most famous for publishing. However, it is likely to be much less significant in terms of impact.

The diplomatic cables were recent - covering the handful of years running up to 2010 - and they were supposed to be secret. The newly released documents though cover a much earlier period, from the mid-1970s. They were once also secret but have since been declassified. The innovation is the placing of these documents into one place and in a database which can be searched by the public. That makes them accessible in a way not seen in the past.

Wikileaks made headlines around the world in 2010 after it released more than 250,000 leaked US cables.

'Trifle patronising'

Mr Assange told Britain's Press Association that the latest collection, entitled the Public Library of US Diplomacy (PlusD), reveal the "vast range and scope" of US diplomatic activity around the world.

The data comprises diplomatic cables, intelligence reports and congressional correspondence running from the beginning of 1973 to the end of 1976.

Much of the correspondence is either written by or sent to Henry Kissinger, who was US Secretary of State and National Security Adviser during that period.

It includes claims, being widely reported by the Indian media, that Rajiv Gandhi - of India's most famous political family - was employed by the Swedish firm Saab-Scandia as it tried to sell its Viggen fighter jet to India.

Mr Gandhi was working as a commercial pilot and not in politics himself at the time.

A US diplomat is quoted in a February 1976 cable as saying: "We would have thought a transport pilot is not the best expert to rely upon in evaluating a fighter plane, but then we are speaking of a transport pilot who has another and perhaps more relevant qualification."

Rajiv Gandhi became prime minister in 1984 and was assassinated in 1991.

Saab-Scandia did not win its bid to sell Viggen fighter jets to India; the contract went to Britain's Jaguar planes.

Another cable, dated February 1975, from London sets out "some first impressions" of new leader of the Conservative Party, Margaret Thatcher, who died on Monday.

The diplomat wrote that "she has a quick, if not profound, mind, and works hard to master the most complicated brief".

She is "crisp and a trifle patronizing" with the media, but "honest and straight-forward" with her colleagues, "if not excessively considerate of their vanities", the diplomat wrote.

"The personification of a British middle class dream come true," she is the "genuine voice of a beleaguered bourgeoise [sic], anxious about its eroding economic power and determined to arrest society's seemingly inexorable trend towards collectivism", the cable said.

The diplomat noted she had "acquired a distinctively upper middle class personal image", which might damage her chances of becoming prime minister, but said she should not be underestimated.


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UK-designed Gamestick device delayed

8 April 2013 Last updated at 12:00 ET

The UK-designed Gamestick handheld console, due to launch this month, has been delayed due to "high demand".

The Android-powered device, which was funded by a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign, will now launch in June, manufacturer Playjam said.

In a statement, the company said it was victim "of the success we have created".

The console faces competition from other similar products, including the Ouya which began shipping in March.

Gamestick will be sold exclusively at Game stores in the UK, with other retail partners set up in 26 other countries.

Over $600,000 (£392,000) was raised when Playjam placed the Gamestick on the Kickstarter website.

In a message to its 5,691 backers, the team explained the setback.

"The main production run has gone from a few thousand units to tens of thousands of units. This has meant that we have had to change production methods and move to high-volume tooling."

Angry backers

The company now predicts the first backers will receive their consoles in the last week of June - more than three months later than planned.

Many backers reacted angrily to the update.

"The biggest problem with this update is that there is no apology for the delay to all the Kickstarters who are eagerly waiting for Gamestick to ship," wrote one backer, Sandesh Deshmukh.

"Looks like Gamestick is taking its backers for granted and I do see a hint of arrogance in that attitude."

Others lamented that due to their nature, Kickstarter projects are prone to delays.

"Shame about the news, but I can live with it," wrote Simon Dick.

"It's not as if Kickstarter is like placing an order on Amazon, I'd be way more concerned if they were silent about anything."

Upon its release, the Gamestick will enter a small but rapidly growing market for cheap games consoles.

The Ouya console, also a Kickstarter project, began shipping last month.


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Microsoft files EU Android complaint

9 April 2013 Last updated at 07:08 ET

Microsoft has accused rival Google of pushing Android handset makers to use its applications such as YouTube and Maps.

Along with Oracle, Nokia and 14 other tech firms, Microsoft has filed a complaint with the European Commission.

The group, known as FairSearch, argues that Google is abusing its dominance of the mobile market.

In response to the filing, Google said: "We continue to work co-operatively with the European Commission."

Trojan horse

"We are asking the commission to move quickly and decisively to protect competition and innovation in this critical market," said Thomas Vinje, Brussels-based counsel for FairSearch.

"Failure to act will only embolden Google to repeat its desktop abuses of dominance as consumers increasingly turn to a mobile platform dominated by Google's Android operating system," he added.

Android is now the dominant mobile operating system, accounting for 70% of the market, according to research firm Gartner.

The complaint describes Google's Android operating system as a "trojan horse", offered to device makers for free. In return they are "required to pre-load an entire suite of Google mobile services and to give them prominent default placement on the phone," the complaint reads.

Privacy policy

Google is also under fire for its common user privacy policy which groups 60 sets of rules into one and allows the company to track users more closely.

Last week six European data protection agencies, including the UK and France, threatened legal action if Google did not make changes to its policy.

In October a European Commission working party said its privacy policy did not meet Commission standards on data protection.

It gave Google four months to comply with its recommendation.

Google maintains that the new policy "respects European law".

Microsoft itself is no stranger to EC scrutiny. In March it was fined 561 million euros (£484m) for failing to promote a range of web browsers in its Windows 7 operating system.


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4G mobile broadband speeds to double

9 April 2013 Last updated at 07:26 ET

Faster speeds for the latest version of mobile technology are being made available in several UK cities.

EE, owner of Orange and T-Mobile, says its fourth generation (4G) broadband speeds should double to more than 20Mbps.

The faster services will be available in 10 cities where 4G has been introduced including Cardiff, London, Manchester, Birmingham and Edinburgh.

But some experts have warned bills for data could soar with faster browsing.

Average speeds on the EE network currently range between 8Mbps and 12Mbps but this should rise to more than 20Mbps.

Since launching 4G in 2012, EE said it had seen a "huge shift" in the way people used mobile phones.

This included an increase in the number of consumers using video, maps and sat-nav tools.

EE said the faster speeds would allow people to upload or download pictures in high definition with greater resolution and view and share videos without delay while on the move.

Ernest Doku, telecoms expert at comparison site uSwitch.com, said with speeds now seven times faster than 3G, it could convince more mobile users to move to 4G.

But he added that the new speeds could be a "double-edged sword" for mobile users worried that their data bills could soar with faster browsing.

The 10 cities where 4G speeds will be doubled by EE include Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, London, Manchester and Sheffield.

The service is now available in 50 towns and cities across the UK, and was recently extended to the rural Northern Fells in Cumbria.

EE was the first company to offer a 4G network in the UK and others are expected to follow suit in the coming months.


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Camera takes 3D pictures with lasers

9 April 2013 Last updated at 07:43 ET

A camera able to create 3D images up to one kilometre (0.62 miles) away has been developed by a team in Edinburgh.

Physicists at Heriot-Watt University developed a technique which uses lasers to scan almost any object.

With extra research, the camera's range could extend to 10km (6.2 miles), the team said.

It will primarily be used to scan objects such as vehicles - but is unable to detect human skin.

The reason is that skin does not reflect the laser in the same way as most other objects - meaning for those wishing to evade the camera's gaze, stripping naked is an option.

Beyond capturing images of objects, the technology could also be used to keep track of the movement of rocks, or foliage growth.

Highly accurate

The camera works, the team explained, by bouncing lasers off distant objects, and measuring the time it takes for the light to travel back to the detector.

The camera is able to record its subject to an accuracy of one millimetre.

With further modifications to the system's image-processing software, the team said it believed the same technology could be used to measure an object's speed and direction.

"Our approach gives a low-power route to the depth imaging of ordinary, small targets at very long range," said Aongus McCarthy, a research fellow at Heriot-Watt.

Mr McCarthy added: "It is clear that the system would have to be miniaturised and made more rugged, but we believe that a lightweight, fully portable scanning depth imager is possible and could be a product in less than five years."


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UK to host cybersecurity centre

9 April 2013 Last updated at 09:15 ET

Foreign Secretary William Hague has announced that a global centre for cybersecurity will be opened at the University of Oxford.

The Global Centre for Cyber Security and Capacity Building will work to help countries develop comprehensive plans to deal with online threats.

The government will provide £1m to fund the centre for the next two years.

It will act as "a beacon of expertise" according to Mr Hague.

"The new global centre for cybersecurity... will co-ordinate global work on cyber-threats and cyber-policies which will help protect the UK's security," he said.

Necessary skills

Countries around the world are keen to increase their levels of cybersecurity in the wake of an unprecedented number of threats.

The US says that it has seen a steady rise in the number of cybersecurity attacks.

Last month a US-based cybersecurity firm accused a branch of China's military of stealing hundreds of terabytes of data from at least 141 organisations around the world.

Part of the Oxford centre's remit will be to ensure that countries have the necessary skills, workforce and technology to tackle online threats.

It will create a guide on some of the key issues as well as looking at ways to ensure that countries have access to relevant expertise on solving problems.

Prof Ian Goldin, director of the Oxford Martin School, where the centre will be based, said: "We are convinced that integrated thinking on cybersecurity is required to address these challenges."

Ross Brewer, vice president of security firm LogRhythm said such a centre was urgently needed.

"Modern cybercriminals work in a collaborative fashion, sharing information on targets, tactics and new approaches to infiltrate networks amongst themselves - often in state sponsored efforts to steal critical information from other countries," he said.

"The planned cybersecurity hub at the University of Oxford is a way for the 'good guys' to collectively fight back, as the global threat can no longer be ignored."

Last month the government announced an initiative to share information on cyber-threats between businesses and governments, including a secure web portal to allow information to be shared in real time.


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UK Lulzsec hacker pleads guilty

9 April 2013 Last updated at 10:30 ET

A 26-year-old man has pleaded guilty to one count of computer hacking as part of a group known as Lulzsec.

Ryan Ackroyd, from South Yorkshire, admitted to being part of the group, whose targets included the NHS and the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca).

He will not face trial on another count of operating a "denial of service attack" (DDoS), which will lie on file.

He and three others on similar charges will be sentenced next month.

Mustafa Al-Bassam, 18, from Peckham, south London, and Jake Davis, 20, from Lerwick, Shetland, have also now pleaded guilty to hacking and launching cyber-attacks.

Ryan Cleary, 21, of Essex, pleaded guilty in June last year to six counts, including hacking into US air force agency computers at the Pentagon.

Ackroyd was due to stand trial charged with taking part in a string of cyber-attacks, but today pleaded guilty to one charge of carrying out an unauthorised act to impair the operation of a computer, contrary to the Criminal Law Act 1977.

'For the lulz'

Lulzsec emerged as a splinter-group of the Anonymous hacking collective in May 2011.

The name stood for Lulz Security - in which "Lulz" is derived from the popular internet term "lol", meaning "laugh out loud".

The group's members employed techniques to flood websites with high traffic - known as DDoS attacks - in order to render them unusable.

Lulzsec claimed to have attacked News International, owner of the Sun newspaper website, on which a false story was planted suggesting that the newspaper's owner, Rupert Murdoch, had died.

In the US, the group was credited with attacking the website of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Lulzsec had previously posted a story on American broadcaster PBS's website, suggesting that deceased rapper Tupac Shakur was in fact alive.


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Tweet row youth PCC stands down

9 April 2013 Last updated at 11:57 ET
Paris Brown, 17

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Paris Brown: "I have made this decision after a great deal of thought and consultation"

The UK's first youth police and crime commissioner, Paris Brown, has resigned from her post following criticism of messages she posted on Twitter.

The 17-year-old, who was appointed last week, said she was "quitting in the interests of the young people of Kent".

Police are investigating her over tweets she posted between the ages of 14 and 16 which could be considered racist and anti-gay.

Kent PCC Ann Barnes said it was "a very sad day".

Miss Brown was appointed to the £15,000-a-year post six days ago by Ms Barnes, who had said she would stand by her.

'Not racist'

In a statement, the teenager, from Sheerness, said: "I accept that I have made comments on social networking sites which have offended many people. I am really sorry for any offence caused.

"I strongly reiterate that I am not racist or homophobic."

Continue reading the main story

The resignation of Paris Brown is more than just a huge personal blow to her and an embarrassment to Kent's Police and Crime Commissioner, Ann Barnes.

It runs the risk of undermining confidence in the Home Office's flagship law and order policy.

Critics will argue that if a PCC cannot carry out basic checks on an applicant's background before appointing them what chance have they got of scrutinising complex policing issues and making difficult budgetary decisions?

If the furore over Paris Brown was the only appointments row since the PCC elections last November it could be viewed as a "one off" But it is not.

In Lincolnshire, the PCC, Alan Hardwick, suspended the force's temporary chief constable, Neil Rhodes, only for the decision to be overturned in court, while Northamptonshire's PCC, Adam Simmonds, has been heavily criticised for placing friends in key roles.

No-one expected PCCs to be perfect - but they will have to take a little more care in future.

She added: "I have fallen into the trap of behaving with bravado on social networking sites. I hope this may stand as a learning experience for many other young people."

Ms Barnes said Miss Brown's tweets were not vetted before she was appointed but she was an "enthusiastic young woman with exceptional skills" who had performed well in a "very tough" interview process.

She said Kent Police's vetting procedures, which were used during the recruitment process, did not normally require social networks to be scrutinised for posts of this grade.

Miss Brown had been asked at the end of her job interview if there were any views she held, or if there was anything in her past that could embarrass her or the youth PCC post, and the teenager's answer had been "no", Ms Barnes added.

She said: "I'm sure many people today would not have the jobs they are in if their thoughts in their teenage years were scrutinised."

She said the events of the past few days had strengthened her desire to create the youth PCC post and she had no plans to resign.

She said Miss Brown would not receive any payment and the youth PCC role would be re-advertised in the summer.

Resignation calls

The teenager was appointed last Wednesday to build a bridge between young people and policing in what was described as a "real hands-on role".

But The Mail on Sunday reported at the weekend Miss Brown had boasted about her sex life, drug-taking and drinking on her Twitter account @vilulabelle and had also posted violent, racist and anti-gay comments. The Twitter page has since been removed.

On Monday, two of Kent's Conservative MPs - Laura Sandys and Damian Collins - said the teenager should step down.

Labour's home affairs select committee chairman Keith Vaz also said he believed her views were "incompatible with holding office".

It later emerged Miss Brown's tweets were being investigated by Kent Police for possible criminal offences after the force received complaints.


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