Google admits sensitive email accounts have been hacked, some users knew months ago (update: US says no government accounts compromised)

The Contagio security blog posted evidence back in February of targeted attacks against government and military officials on Gmail. Today, nearly four months later, Google has finally admitted this is true: hundreds of personal accounts have been compromised by hackers it believes to be working out of Jinan, the capital of China’s Shandong province. The accounts include those of “senior U.S. government officials, Chinese political activists, officials in several Asian countries (predominantly South Korea), military personnel and journalists.” The hijackers’ aim appears to have been to spy on their targets using Google’s automatic forwarding function. But unlike the PSN fiasco, Google insists its internal systems “have not been affected.” Instead it seems the hackers used a phishing scam, possibly directing users to a spoof Gmail website before requesting their credentials. Google says its own “abuse detection systems” disrupted the campaign — but in a footnote right down at the bottom of their official blog page they also credit Contagio and user reports.

Update: And in comes China’s response, courtesy of Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hong Lei. “Allegations that the Chinese government supports hacking activities are completely unfounded and made with ulterior motives.” Ok then, that settles that.

Update 2: And the saga continues… According to an AP story published earlier today, the Obama administration has stated that the FBI is looking into allegations that hackers broke into Google’s email system, but denied that any official government accounts were compromised. A White House spokesman went on to say that government employees are free to use Gmail for personal purposes, and can not be sure who in the administration might have been affected by the attack. Let’s just hope they know how to leave the sensitive stuff at the office.

Google admits sensitive email accounts have been hacked, some users knew months ago (update: US says no government accounts compromised) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jun 2011 18:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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EVO 4G getting Gingerbread on June 6th (or Friday if you’re impatient)

Well, this was inevitable. After Sprint’s website snafu outing its Android 2.3 intentions for the EVO 4G, we’ve received evidence that points to June 6th as its release date. Better yet, if you’re willing to manually check for its availability, you might even find a happy surprise this Friday. In addition to Gingerbread, users will find SMS and Gmail fixes, along with a tweak to the phone’s power management software. Hopefully you’ve got WiMAX, because this update is coming over-the-air. Should everything go according to plan, users will have less than a week to say goodbye to Froyo. It’s a trusty companion for sure, but that spicy aroma is quite enticing. Hit the break for some corroborating clues.

[Thanks, Tone Bone]

Continue reading EVO 4G getting Gingerbread on June 6th (or Friday if you’re impatient)

EVO 4G getting Gingerbread on June 6th (or Friday if you’re impatient) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jun 2011 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry finally sees competition within US government

Despite our commander-in-chief’s seemingly undying allegiance to BlackBerry, it looks like the federal government could be ready to make a break from RIM. According to a Washington Post article published yesterday, a number of agencies within the federal government are questioning their attachment to the standard-issue BlackBerry devices, and allowing government employees to bring in their own preferred methods of communication — among other things, Congress now allows the use of iPads and iPhones on the House floor and use of BlackBerrys at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has dropped from 1,000 to 700 in the past year. What’s more, the General Services Administration is currently shifting 17,000 employees to Gmail, a move it says could reduce expenses by 50 percent in the next five years. Likewise, the USDA will also move its email services to the cloud with Microsoft’s services, claiming $6 million in annual savings. Now, we doubt Obama’s going to turn a blind eye to RIM entirely, but he has been getting awfully cozy with that iPad.

BlackBerry finally sees competition within US government originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 May 2011 16:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Yahoo upgrades its email for everyone, puts Facebook updates and tweets in your inbox

Yahoo is the latest in a line of would-be champions to try to topple king Gmail from its perch atop the email mountain. The company’s newest Mail Beta (no relation to Gmail Beta) was introduced last October, but now its overhauled UI and fresh features are available to all. With the change comes quicker load times, stronger spam filtration, and it lets you send and receive Facebook updates and tweets. It also automatically turns picture and video links into thumbnail previews and handles up to 100MB attachments. These fancy new features are certainly a step in the right direction (even if the purple paintjob isn’t), but time will tell if it’ll rule the webmail world.

Yahoo upgrades its email for everyone, puts Facebook updates and tweets in your inbox originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 May 2011 06:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Stop Wasting Your Life With Email OCD

From the time you wake up until the time you go to sleep, your email inbox steadily increases in size as bosses, co-workers, friends and spammers hit you up with every query and joke imaginable. More »

Windows Live Hotmail Now Has 5GB of Storage

This article was written on August 14, 2007 by CyberNet.

WindowslivehotmailThere’s lots of news coming from the Windows Live Blog regarding upgrades and improvements to Windows Live Hotmail. Probably the biggest upgrade is that all users now have 5GB of storage (paid users will have 10GB). To compare, my Gmail account is currently at around 2.8 GB which means at this point, Google’s Gmail offers the lowest amount of storage among their competitors (Yahoo offers unlimited).

An increase in mail storage wasn’t the only announcement though, there’s a whole list of changes and updates. One that stood out was “contacts de-duplication.” Maybe it stood out just because of the name, but they say that they’re the first email service to offer a service to clean up your list of duplicate contacts. So for example, if you have three entries for the same person – they’ll put all of the entries together as one.

A few other changes (full list here):

  • Performance – improvements in speed
  • Forward messages – forward your Hotmail messages to other Hotmail accounts.
  • Smaller header – which means more space for your email

If you don’t have these changes applied to your account yet, don’t worry. The Windows Live Hotmail team says that these features are being gradually rolled out to their customers over the next few weeks. I checked my account, and no changes are there quite yet.

Source: Thanks to Richard in the Forums and the Anonymous tipster!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Facebook admits hiring PR firm to smear Google

It seems like the ongoing rivalry between Facebook and Google has taken a turn for the subversive. Last night, a spokesman for the social network confirmed to the Daily Beast that Facebook paid a top PR firm to spread anti-Google stories across the media and to encourage various outlets to examine allegations that the Mountain View company was violating user privacy. The PR firm, Burson-Marsteller, even offered to help blogger Chris Soghoian write a critical op-ed piece about Social Circle — a service that allows Gmail users to access information on so-called “secondary connections,” or friends of their friends. Social Circle, in fact, seems to have been at the epicenter of Facebook’s smear campaign. In a pitch to journalists, Burson described the tool in borderline apocalyptic terms:

“The American people must be made aware of the now immediate intrusions into their deeply personal lives Google is cataloging and broadcasting every minute of every day-without their permission.”

Soghoian thought that Burson’s representatives were “making a mountain out of a molehill,” so he decided to prod them about which company they might be working for. When Burson refused to spill the beans, Soghoian went public and published all of the e-mails sent between him and the firm. USA Today picked up on the story, before concluding that any claims of a smear campaign were unfounded. The Daily Beast‘s Dan Lyons, however, apparently forced Facebook’s hand after confronting the company with “evidence” of its involvement. A Facebook spokesman said the social network hired Burson to do its Nixonian dirty work for two primary reasons: it genuinely believes that Google is violating consumer privacy and it also suspects that its rival “may be improperly using data they have scraped about Facebook users.” In other words, their actions were motivated by both “altruistic” and self-serving agendas, though we’d be willing to bet that the latter slightly outweighed the former. Google, meanwhile, has yet to comment on the story, saying that it still needs more time to wrap its head around everything — which might just be the most appropriate “no comment” we’ve ever heard.

Facebook admits hiring PR firm to smear Google originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 May 2011 07:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google adding Netflix, Hulu support, offline Gmail, Calendar and Docs to Chrome OS this summer, prices hardware at $20 per month

Google’s currently in the process of detailing Chrome OS’ latest improvements and there are a couple of big ‘uns: Netflix and Hulu support will be available right out of the box for the pair of new Chromebooks — one from Samsung and one from Acer. An improved file manager has also been added to the upcoming version of Chrome OS, plus offline versions of Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Docs — all will be made available for Chromebook users this summer. You can learn more about these improvements in the video after the break.

Far more monumental, Google’s also just announced the cost of these Chromebooks and there’s no upfront payment to speak of. Instead, Chrome OS laptops will be distributed on the basis of a recurring monthly subscription, which will cost $28 per user for businesses and $20 per user for schools. That includes regular software and hardware upgrades. Hardware as a service, folks!

Continue reading Google adding Netflix, Hulu support, offline Gmail, Calendar and Docs to Chrome OS this summer, prices hardware at $20 per month

Google adding Netflix, Hulu support, offline Gmail, Calendar and Docs to Chrome OS this summer, prices hardware at $20 per month originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 13:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gmail now stores up to 25,000 contacts for the insanely popular

Are you quietly proud of the girth of your social circle? Do you think having 146 Facebook buddies is impressive? Snap out of it, saddo. Some Gmail users have thousands upon thousands of contacts in their list — so many, in fact, that they’ve been begging Google to increase its 10,000 limit. The Big G has now obliged these jabbering fiends, yanking the limit up to 25,000 and also boosting available cloud storage to 128KB per contact instead of 32KB. We imagine this could be of some help to business users perhaps, or those nice strangers who send out stock tips. But for the rest of us, the gesture is about as inconsequential as the professionally good-looking.

Gmail now stores up to 25,000 contacts for the insanely popular originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 May 2011 06:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to use Filters to Enhance Gmail’s Priority Inbox

This article was written on September 14, 2010 by CyberNet.

A few weeks ago Google started rolling out Priority Inbox, a feature for Gmail that promises to sort your incoming mail so that all the important stuff is shown at the top of the page. Although the algorithm claims to improve automatically over time as it gets accustomed to your e-mailing habits, there’s a simple way to make ensure that certain kinds of e-mails are always marked as important or unimportant.

Priority Inbox

Perhaps you’re familiar with the concept of filters. Filters tell Gmail to take a certain action when an e-mail meets certain conditions. For example, you can instruct Gmail to assign the label “Work” to all incoming e-mail from your boss. You can create a filter in two steps. First, you pick the conditions that will trigger the filter. Secondly, you’ll have to tell Gmail which actions it should take when an e-mail meets these conditions.

Since Gmail unveiled Priority Inbox, you can let it automatically mark certain e-mails as important. You could, perhaps, mark all mails from Facebook as “Not important”. If your phone carrier sends you your monthly bill via e-mail, you might want Gmail to put these messages onto the “Important” pile. The possibilities are endless.

So how do you go about setting up a priority filter? First of all, make sure that you’ve enabled Priority Inbox. You should be able to find it by clicking on Settings (the link in the top right corner) and then going to the Priority Inbox tab. If there’s no such tab in your Gmail settings, it is possible that the feature hasn’t been rolled out to your account yet. All you can do in that case is wait for it to arrive.

Creating a filter - Step 1

Now you can start creating your filters. Go back to Settings and find the Filters tab. Click Create a new filter. Now you can set up the conditions that will trigger the filter. After clicking Next Step, you’ll see a list of e-mails that meet the conditions you just picked. Take a close look at that list to ensure that you’ve set up the filter correctly. Perhaps certain e-mails you’d expect to be listed there are not showing up. Or maybe the conditions you picked are way too broad and e-mails you didn’t want to be affected show up in the list. In both cases, you’ll have to go back and tweak the conditions until you get it right.

Creating a filter - Step 2

All that’s left to do now is choose the action that should be taken when an e-mail matches the filter requirements. Check either Always mark it as important or Never mark it as important, depending on your needs. You might want to take a look at the other actions that can be taken – perhaps you want to apply a label to selected e-mails. Having Gmail automatically apply certain colored labels on incoming messages can hugely reduce your inbox chaos. Optionally, you can select Also apply filter to conversations below if you also want the filter to be applied to the e-mail threads that are listed below the filter setup box.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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