Thursday, 25 September 2014

5 million ‘compromised’ Google accounts leaked

5 million ‘compromised’ Google accounts leaked

Russian hackers highlights the Data Breach of 1.2 Billion users credentials and this was the largest data breached in the Internet history and now once again another nasty breached came forward related with Russian. A database of what appears to be some 5 million login and password pairs for Google accounts has been leaked to a Russian cyber security internet forum. It follows similar leaks of account data for popular Russian web services. Yesterday, on Bitcoin security board a post was made by the forum users 'tvskit' which includes the text file on post, and the text file containing the alleged compromised accounts data of Google users. The list contains about 4.93 million entries and the accounts are mostly those of Google users and give access to Gmail mail service, G+ social network and other Google products too. According to the Russian IT news website CNews reports, hacker claims that 60 percent of the passwords were valid, and many users had confirmed that there login data was present on the leaked database. Till yet Google have not mention anything on the breach or the leaked data, but Google Russian had started investigating for the alleged leaked data. As for the users security, Google advised its users to immediately change the password and also choose strong password. Further more Search giants also recommend to enable two-step login verification to protect their accounts. Just before of this leak, two similar leaks were also affected to the Mail.ru and Yandex, both popular Russian Internet service. On this leak, there were 4.66 million entries of Mail.ru and 1.26 million entries was of Yandex, For Mail.ru and Yandex leaks, both firm have said that the majority of the entries listed was obsolete or suspended. Companies have confirmed that there database were not breached, and the leaked data was accumulated over years through phishing and other forms of hacking attacks on users.

------------------------------------------------------------------- Update----------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you want to check whether your Google, Mail.ru or Yandex account is also in the leaked or not then Simply check this site and put your Gmail address (Mail.ru id or Yandex), finally click on Check It. The site will search for your id address in the leaked data base and display you the results.

Thursday, 7 August 2014

Google today released a neat feature

Google today released a neat feature for those who like to reduce the number of emails they receive. In short, #Gmail will now surface the Unsubscribe link in certain emails to the top, beside the sender’s email address.

Russian hackers highlights the 'Largest Data Breach' of 1.2 Billion users credentials

This is the biggest data theft in the internet history, that Russian Cyber criminals have amassed a huge database of 1.2 billion stolen user names and passwords and half a billion email addresses. The reports of the data breach and theft came from the U.S. based internet security firm Hold Security.

Researcher from the Hold security claims that this is the biggest data theft ever collected in the Internet history. This could reached into every corner of the Web and hit around 420,000 sites, said Hold Security


 The New York Times, which first reported the story, said it hired an independent security expert who verified that the stolen data is authentic. Hold Security didn't identify the websites that were breached, citing confidentiality agreements with clients, but it said they include household names as well as small websites.

Remember the data breach of Target, which affecting 40 million credit and debit card numbers and 
70 million users personal records. That was one of the largest breaches of all time, but the activities of the Russian gang take identity theft to a new level.

Alex Holden, founder and chief information security officer of Hold Security says -
"Before, we were amazed when 10,000 passwords [went] missing. Now we're in the age of mass production of stolen information,".
"These guys did nothing new or innovative," "They just did it better and on a mass level so it affects absolutely everybody"- he added.
Security firm told to New York Times that the group behind the attack appears to be based in south central Russia and With servers based in Russia, the group expanded its activities earlier this year, probably after partnering with a larger organization. 

The new York Times also noted that Hold security will provide an online tool to let people check if their own credentials are among those stolen, but it is not been cleared that when it will be available.

This breach incident once again puts a question over the users security and the security that users opt from themselves. 

Earlier, many time we have recommend our readers not to have similar password for the online accounts and also use the complex passwords for accounts. We know that its hard to remember too many of the password but its not impossible also. We like to tell our users to use the password which are not a dictionary words and at least use 1 special character with the alpha-numeric words.

Hold security regularly tracks online breaches on behalf of its customers, and earlier also firm have uncovered the theft of 153 million credentials from Adobe Systems.

Monday, 3 February 2014

7 Google Projects That Failed Big Time !!!

7 Google Projects That Failed Big Time !!!

Google is definitely a winner in majority of its business ventures. Be it Search, Android or Chrome, Google is indeed the biggest tech giant! But does it always succeed? Well, not really. Here we bring to you 7 Google projects that failed big time, and there are many more unlisted. Moral of the story: even multiple failures are never the end of any voyage! Move on, explore and win!

1. Google Lively: Google Lively is one apt example of “right idea, wrong implementation”. One reason why many have not even heard about it is the fact that it lasted only for six months in 2008. It held a similar concept than that of “Second Life” and carried a similar non-game virtual environments.

2. Google Answers: Another failure of Google especially termed as failure because a similar concept from Yahoo, the Yahoo answer is still being read and flourished like any thing, so wonder what stopped Google’s project? Well who would pay for something that could be researched on internet. Google answer allowed users to post bounties for well researched answers to their queries. Asker-accepted answers cost $2 to $200. Google retained 25 per cent of the researcher’s reward and a 50 cent fee per question. In addition to the researcher’s fees, a client who was satisfied with the answer could also leave a tip of up to $100. In late November 2006, Google reported that it planned to permanently shut down the service (except for the Hong Kong version), and it was fully closed to new activity by late December 2006, although its archives remain available.

3. Dodgeball: Dodgeball was a location-based social networking software provider for mobile devices. Users text their location to the service, which then notifies them of crushes, friends, friends’ friends and interesting venues nearby. Dodgeball was founded in 2000 by New York University students Dennis Crowley and Alex Rainert. The company was acquired by Google in 2005. In April 2007, Crowley and Rainert left Google, with Crowley describing their experience there as “incredibly frustrating”. After leaving Google, Crowley created a similar service known as Foursquare with the help of Naveen Selvadurai. In January 2009, Vic Gundotra, vice president of Engineering at Google, announced that the company would “discontinue Dodgeball.com in the next couple of months, after which this service will no longer be available.” Dodgeball was shut down and was replaced in February 2009 by Google Latitude.

4. Jaiku: Jaiku was a social networking, micro-blogging and lifestreaming service comparable to Twitter. It was founded in February 2006 by Jyri Engeström and Petteri Koponen from Finland and launched in July of that year. It was purchased by Google on October 9, 2007. On January 14, 2009, it was announced that Google would be open-sourcing the product but would “no longer actively develop the Jaiku codebase” leaving development to a “passionate volunteer team of Googlers”. On March 12, 2009, Jaiku was re-launched on Google’s App Engine platform and on March 13, 2009 the source code to JaikuEngine (the open source equivalent of the jaiku.com codebase) was released. On October 14, 2011, Google announced they decided to shut down the Jaiku services by January 15, 2012.

5. Google Notebook: Google Notebook was a free online application offered by Google that allowed users to save and organize clips of information while conducting research online. The browser-based tool permitted a user to write notes, clip text and images, and save links from pages during a browser session. The information was saved to an online “notebook” with sharing and collaboration features. Notebooks could be made “public”, or visible to others, and also could be used to collaborate with a list of users (either publicly or privately). On Jan 14, 2009, Google announced that they were stopping development on the service. However, Google Notebook users could continue to use the service. Almost immediately, Evernote launched a Google notebook importer on Jan 22, 2009. In September 2011, Google announced it would discontinue a number of its products, including Google Notebook. On November 11, 2011, Google began exporting the contents of existing Notebooks to Google Docs, and made Google Notebooks read-only. As of July 2012, all Notebook data had been exported and Google Notebook was shut down. On March 20, 2013, Google launched its new note-taking application Google Keep.

6. Google Video: Google Videos (originally Google Video) was a video search engine, and formerly a free video sharing website, from Google. Before removing user-uploaded content, the service allowed selected videos to be remotely embedded on other websites and provided the necessary HTML code alongside the media, similar to YouTube. This allowed for websites to host large amounts of video remotely without running into bandwidth or storage capacity issues. The service was launched on January 25, 2005. On October 9, 2006, Google bought former competitor YouTube. Google announced on June 13, 2007 that the Google Videos search results would begin to include videos discovered by their search crawlers on other hosting services, in YouTube and user uploads. In 2009, Google discontinued the ability to upload videos to Google’s web servers. Google Videos was shut down on August 20, 2012. The Google Videos content was automatically moved to YouTube.

7. Google Wave: Google Wave was a web-based computing platform and communications protocol designed to merge key features of communications media such as email, instant messaging, wikis, and social networking. It was announced at the Google I/O conference on May 27, 2009 and was initially released only to developers, a preview release of Google Wave was extended to 100,000 users in September 2009, each allowed to invite additional users. Google accepted most requests submitted starting November 29, 2009, soon after the September extended release of the technical preview. On May 19, 2010, it was released to the general public. On August 4, 2010, Google announced the suspension of stand-alone Wave development and the intent of maintaining the web site at least for the remainder of the year and on November 22, 2011, announced that existing Waves would become read-only in January 2012 and all Waves would be deleted in April 2012. Google Wave was accepted by the Apache Software Foundation’s Incubator program under the project name Apache Wave. The Google Wave Developer blog was updated with news of the change on December 6, 2010.

Saturday, 1 February 2014

FULL FORMS OF COMPUTER RELATED TERMS

* HTTP - Hyper Text Transfer Protocol.
* HTTPS - Hyper Text Transfer Protocol Secure.
* IP - Internet Protocol.
* URL - Uniform Resource Locator.
* USB - Universal Serial Bus.
* VIRUS - Vital Information Resource Under Seized.
* 3G - 3rd Generation.
* GSM - Global System for Mobile Communication.
* CDMA - Code Divison Multiple Access.
* UMTS - Universal Mobile Telecommunication System.
* SIM - Subscriber Identity Module.
* AVI = Audio Video Interleave.
* RTS = Real Time Streaming
* SIS = Symbian OS Installer File.
* AMR = Adaptive Multi-Rate Codec.
* JAD = Java Application Descriptor.
* JAR = Java Archive.
* JAD = Java Application Descriptor.
* 3GPP = 3rd Generation Partnership Project.
* 3GP = 3rd Generation Project.
* MP3 = MPEG player lll.
* MP4 = MPEG-4 video file.
* AAC = Advanced Audio Coding.
* GIF = Graphic InterchangeableFormat.
* JPEG = Joint Photographic ExpertGroup.
* BMP = Bitmap.
* SWF = Shock Wave Flash.
* WMV = Windows Media Video.
* WMA = Windows Media Audio.
* WAV = Waveform Audio.
* PNG = Portable Network Graphics.
* DOC = Document (Microsoft Corporation.
* PDF = Portable Document Format.
* M3G = Mobile 3D Graphics.
* M4A = MPEG-4 Audio File.
* NTH = Nokia Theme (series 40).
* THM = Themes (Sony Ericsson).
* MMF = Synthetic Music Mobile Application File.
* NRT = Nokia Ringtone.
* XMF = Extensible Music File.
* WBMP = Wireless Bitmap Image.
* DVX = DivX Video.
* HTML = Hyper Text Markup Language.
* WML = Wireless Markup Language.
* CD - Compact Disk.
* DVD - Digital Versatile Disk.
* CRT - Cathode Ray Tube.
* DAT - Digital Audio Tape.
* DOS - Disk Operating System.
* GUI - Graphical User Interface.
* HTTP - Hyper Text Transfer Protocol.
* IP - Internet Protocol.
* ISP - Internet Service Provider.
* TCP - Transmission Control Protocol.
* UPS - UninterruptiblePower Supply.
* HSDPA - High Speed Downlink Packet Access.
* EDGE - Enhanced Data Rate for GSM[Global System for Mobile Communication] Evolution.
* VHF - Very High Frequency.
* UHF - Ultra High Frequency.
* GPRS - General Packet Radio Service.
* WAP - Wireless Application Protocol.
* TCP - Transmission Control Protocol .
* ARPANET - Advanced Research Project Agency Network.
* IBM - International Business Machines.
* HP - Hewlett Packard.
* AM/FM - Amplitude/ Frequency Modulation.
* WLAN - Wireless Local Area Network.

Google Is Selling Morola To Lenovo For $2.9 Billion

Google team have finally confirmed that Google is selling Motorola to Lenovo for $2.91 billion. Google have made this announcement on the Official Google blog. Google CEO +Larry Page said that the decision to sell would not only help Lenovo in the smartphone race, but also let his company focus on driving innovation within the Android ecosystem Google have acquired Motorola in 2012, in just a thought to supercharge Android ecosystem. The deal of $2.91 billion is just a fraction of the what Google paid for Motorola. After acquired by Google, Motorola have try to came back and launched a several smartphones which able to create quite a bit of attention including Moto X. After deal, Lenovo will be keeping Motorola's brand, but Google will still keep majority of the its patents. Lenovo CEO Yang Yuangqing, says in a statement that, We are confident that we can bring together the best of both companies to deliver products customers will love and a strong, growing business. Lenovo has a proven track record of successfully embracing and strengthening great brands – as we did with IBM’s Think brand – and smoothly and efficiently integrating companies around-the-world. I am confident we will be successful with this process, and that our companies will not only maintain our current momentum in the market, but also build a strong foundation for the future. You can read more details about the deal and also about how Google will receive $2.91 Billion, then this will help you. Don't know what will be the Google next steps, as last week company owned Nest Labs and now they are selling Motorola. Its being quite interesting to see that what Google is doing and what are there plans for future. May users are getting something new things from firm..??

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Top sites in india

Top Sites in India
1
Google India
google.co.in
Indian version of this popular search engine. Search the whole web or only webpages from India. ...

2.Google
google.com
Enables users to search theworld's information, includingwebpages, images, and videos. Offers ...

3.Facebook facebook.com
A social utility that connects people, to keep up with friends, upload photos, share links and ...

4
YouTube
youtube.com
YouTube is a way to get your videos to the people who matter to you. Upload, tag and share your ...

5
Yahoo! yahoo.com
A major internet portal and service provider offering search results, customizablecontent, cha ...

6.blogspot.in

7.Wikipedia wikipedia.org
A free encyclopedia built collaboratively using wiki software. (Creative Commons Attribution-Sh ...

8.LinkedIn
linkedin.com
A networking tool to find connections to recommendedjob candidates, industry experts and busin ..

9.Indiatimes indiatimes.com
Portal site; includes news stories under subject headings, and links to otherinformation sources.

10.googleusercontent.com