Friday, July 5, 2013

EU threatens to suspend data agreements with US, citing privacy concerns

The EU threatened to suspend US access to certain financial and travel data in wake of recent NSA leaks.

By Adrian Croft,?Reuters / July 5, 2013

European Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels. Malmstrom expressed concerns over US surveillance techniques.

Francois Lenoir/ Reuters/ File

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The?European Union?is threatening to suspend two agreements granting the?United States?access to European financial and travel data unless Washington shows it is respecting EU rules on data?privacy, EU officials said on Friday.

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The threat reflects European disquiet about allegations that the?United States?has engaged in widespread eavesdropping on European Internet users as well as spying on the EU.

Cecilia Malmstrom, the EU's home affairs commissioner, wrote to two senior U.S. officials on Thursday to voice European concerns over implementation of the two agreements, both struck in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks and regarded by Washington as important tools in the fight against terrorism.

"Should we fail to demonstrate the benefits of (the agreements) for our citizens and the fact that they have been implemented in full compliance with the law, their credibility will be seriously affected and in such a case I will be obliged to reconsider (whether) the conditions for their implementation are still met," Malmstrom said.

EU-U.S. relations are going through a "delicate moment", she wrote in the letter to U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and?David Cohen, Treasury under-secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

"Mutual trust and confidence have been seriously eroded and I expect the US to do all that it can to restore them," she said in the letter, seen by Reuters.

Malmstrom is dispatching a team of officials to Washington next week for previously scheduled reviews of both information-sharing agreements.

The Terrorist Finance Tracking Programme (TFTP) provides the US Treasury with data stored in?Europe?on international financial transfers. The Passenger Name Record agreement covers data provided by passengers when booking tickets and checking in for flights. All such information is passed to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

SAFEGUARDS

The?United States?and the EU need to show that the two data-sharing agreements "continue to bring benefits to our security and that the robust safeguards attached to them are respected to the full. We need complete transparency and a maximum of information on both programmes," Malmstrom wrote.

The?European Parliament, some of whose members have long worried that the agreements granted the?United States?too much access to European data, called on Thursday for the scrapping of both accords unless Washington revealed the extent of its electronic spying operations in?Europe.

Many of the eavesdropping reports were based on leaks by fugitive former US spy agency contractor?Edward Snowden.

Last month, US officials confirmed the existence of an electronic spying operation codenamed PRISM, which according to Snowden collects data from European and other users of?Google?, Facebook,?Skype?and other U.S. companies.

In a separate leak, the?United States?was accused of eavesdropping on EU offices and officials.

France?initially urged the EU to delay talks on an ambitious trade pact with the?United Statesover the alleged spying.

European Commission?President Jose Manuel Barroso said later that?Europe?would begin the trade talks on Monday as planned but would at the same time set up EU-U.S. working groups to examine the scope of?US intelligence-gathering.

Separately, German Interior Minister?Hans-Peter Friedrich?said the country's intelligence services were not spying on the?United States?and that he did not think German policymakers were under US surveillance.

"Anything else would be inacceptable," he was quoted by the mass-circulation Bild newspaper as saying.

"It would be inacceptable for NATO partners and friends to spy on?German government?offices and if that were the case, we would not only demand that this stops immediately, we would also demand an apology."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/drIN4IzCCUA/EU-threatens-to-suspend-data-agreements-with-US-citing-privacy-concerns

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10 Things to Know for Today

Egyptians celebrate in front of the constitutional court after Egypt's chief justice Adly Mansour was sworn in as the nation's interim president Thursday, July 4, 2013. Arabic reads, " bye bye Morsi." The chief justice of Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court was sworn in Thursday as the nation's interim president, taking over hours after the military ousted the Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Egyptians celebrate in front of the constitutional court after Egypt's chief justice Adly Mansour was sworn in as the nation's interim president Thursday, July 4, 2013. Arabic reads, " bye bye Morsi." The chief justice of Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court was sworn in Thursday as the nation's interim president, taking over hours after the military ousted the Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Oamohetswe Mabitsela, 4 months old, is placed by his mother next to a picture of Nelson Mandela for her to take a photograph of him with her camera phone, outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Thursday, July 4, 2013. The remains of Nelson Mandela's three deceased children were reburied at their original resting site on Thursday, a day after a court ordered their return two years after Mandela's grandson moved the bodies. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Spectators watch as fireworks explode overhead during the Fourth of July celebration at Pioneer Park, Thursday, July 4, 2013 in Prescott, Ariz. On a day meant to ponder the nation's birth, and those who built and defended it over 237 years, Prescott's residents had 19 of their neighbors, their friends, their relatives to remember. Nineteen Granite Mountain Hotshot firefighters were killed Sunday by an out-of-control blaze near Yarnell, Ariz. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. MORE VIOLENCE FEARED AFTER MORSI OUSTER

The Muslim Brotherhood called for protests today after the military arrested the group's revered leader and other top allies to Egypt's deposed president.

3. FIREWORKS AND TRIBUTES ON JULY 4

Arizona held a candlelight vigil for 19 fallen firefighters and Washington, D.C., prepared a musical tribute to victims and survivors of the Boston bombings.

3. MANDELA'S HEALTH 'PERILOUS'

Court documents say the 94-year-old anti-apartheid leader is being kept alive by a breathing machine and faces "impending death."

4. ECONOMISTS HOPE FOR STRONGER HALF OF YEAR

They predict the government will say today the U.S. added another 165,000 jobs last month after a solid month of hiring in June.

5. WHO GOT PAID IN CHURCH ABUSE CASE

An AP analysis of documents released this week show most of the $30 million paid out by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee went to a few people. Hundreds got nothing.

6. FALLOUTOVER SNOWDEN SAGA

Bolivia's president warned he would close the U.S. Embassy after his presidential plane was rerouted amid suspicions the NSA leaker was on board.

7. MAN WITH EXPLOSIVES ARRESTED NEAR SEATTLE CAMPUS

University of Washington police say the Nevada man had a scoped rifle, shotgun and 10 Molotov cocktails in a stolen car.

8. FIREWORKS TIP INTO CALIF. CROWD

Police say a wood platform holding the live pyrotechnics fell over, injuring 28 at a July 4 show near Los Angeles.

9. PROSECUTORS WRAP UP IN ZIMMERMAN TRIAL

They still may call Trayvon Martin's parents to testify about whose voice is on 911 recordings reporting the fight between Zimmerman and Martin.

10. TRAINS TO ROLL AGAIN IN SAN FRANCISCO

The Bay Area transit agency and the union called off the strike after four days, giving itself another month to reach a deal.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-07-05-10%20Things%20to%20Know-Today/id-021c74d0bdb5450c95da4ba264c4acf6

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Thursday, July 4, 2013

A 4-Year-Old Android Bug Could Bring Malware to 99% of Devices

A 4-Year-Old Android Bug Could Bring Malware to 99% of Devices

A team of security researchers claim to have identified a four-year-old Android bug that can allow malicious trojans to appear as verified apps, infecting devices with malware while users remain unaware of its presence.

Usually, apps are verified using cryptographic signatures: modified updates are thus rejected if the key doesn't match the one provided by the software developer. But the team, from Bluebox Labs, have found a way to modify an app's APK file without breaking the signature?which means malicious code can easily be injected and users never made aware.

The team claims the bug has existed since Android 1.6 Donut, and that it affects 99 percent of devices which use the OS. Google was notified of the bug in February 2013, but because of the way Android updates roll out it's up to device manufacturers to offer users a patch for the vulnerability. Apparently the Galaxy S4 has already been updated?but weirdly Google's Nexus line remains a work-in-progress.

Of course, before you panic too much it's worth noting that, even if malicious code can be injected into an already verified app, the software has to find its way onto your phone. And if you're exclusively using the Play Store it's not clear how that would happen?unless you're tricked into downloading bogus updates from third-party app stores or the web. The take home: be careful when you stray from Google's safe haven.

Bluebox will present the research later this month at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. [Bluebox via IDG via Verge]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-4-year-old-android-bug-could-bring-malware-to-99-of-668123042

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Engadget HD Podcast 356 - 07.02.13

Engadget HD Podcast 347 - 04.30.13

We may have had some connectivity issues during our livestream, but the magic of post production means a smooth podcast for your listening pleasure as usual. Aside from the usual topics like Netflix, 4K TVs and IPTV, Ben's still wondering how Richard manages to have time to waste for watching multiple TV episodes -- given our hectic schedules and all. Get to streaming below!

Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh (@bjdraw), Richard Lawler (@rjcc)

Producer: Joe Pollicino (@akaTRENT)

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ICv6ZvScqfk/

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This Thorium Reactor Has the Power of a Norse God

This Thorium Reactor Has the Power of a Norse God

The Uranium-235 and -238 we use in modern nuclear fission reactors are humanity's single most energy-dense fuel source (1,546,000,000 MJ/L), but that potent power potential comes at a steep price?and not just during natural disasters. Its radioactive plutonium byproducts remain lethally irradiated for millennia. That's why one pioneering Nordic company is developing an alternative fuel that doesn't produce it.

When uranium is used in a conventional Light Water Reactor, it's converted into plutonium (and if the U238 isotope is used, the result can be fissable Pu239). Even without the danger of weapons-grade plutonium proliferating from a country's stores of radioactive waste, there's not really an easy way to dispose of the byproduct. Our best answer so far has been burying it and hoping for the best. Instead, Thor Energy?a subsidiary of the Oslo-based Scatec group?wants to burn up that store of plutonium to power the very reactors that created it. All its system needs is the addition of thorium. A lot of it.

Luckily, thorium (Th232) is an abundant?albeit slightly radioactive?element. It's estimated to be four times as common as uranium and 500 times as much as U238. It's so common that it's currently treated like a byproduct in the rare-earth mining industry. Problem is, naturally occurring thorium doesn't contain enough of its fissable isotope (Th231) to maintain criticality. But that's where the plutonium comes in. What Thor energy did was mix ceramic thorium oxide (ThO2) with plutonium oxide (nuclear waste) in a 90:10 ratio to create thorium-MOX (mixed-oxide). The thorium oxide acts as a matrix that holds the plutonium in place as its used up.

This stuff could very well revolutionize nuclear power. Thorium-MOX can be formed into rods and used in current generation (Gen II) nuclear reactor with minimal retrofitting. Ceramic thorium has a higher thermal conductivity and melting point than uranium, meaning it can operate at a lower (and safer) internal pellet temperature with less chance of a meltdown, fewer fission gas emissions, and extended fuel cycles.

Most importantly, thorium doesn't convert into plutonium?precisely the opposite, in fact. That is, the process consumes plutonium. We could be looking at a means of not only halting the growth American nuclear waste sites but actually reducing our stores of plutonium while simultaneously reducing the danger of nuclear proliferation. Sure, the thorium system does create waste of i's own, but irradiated thorium doesn't oxidize and remains more stable as it decays. What more could you want?

Thor Energy is currently testing the new technology on the small scale. A prototype reactor will power a paper mill in the town of Halden, Norway for the next five years. If the fuel proves to be commercially viable during that test, we could see a sea change in nuclear power by the end of the decade.

[Extreme Tech - Thor Energy - Thorium 100 - Thor Energy - Wikipedia - Britannica - Image: Thor Energy]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-thorium-reactor-has-the-power-of-a-norse-god-649185119

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