Digi Introduce Garmin-Asus A10 Smartphone

5142979310 3cd577000f Digi Introduce Garmin Asus A10 Smartphone

Another Android phone has been unveiled by Digi this week, but not the model that you used to see before. It is Garmin-Asus A10,  a smartphone with GPS from.. Garmin, yeah. At a glance, you can tell that this is GPS focused smartphone.

GPS no longer a special feature in smartphone when GPS app is available at almost all smartphone platform, from free version such as what is available on Nokia smartphone via Ovi Maps to the like of Tom Tom or Papago that available in iOS or other Android smartphone. But if you’re looking for smartphone that has deep integration with GPS, perhaps this phone is for you.

The pricing is quite attractive especially if you’re willing to sign up for 24 months that give you huge discount worth of RM900 in return . The packages also comes with free car kit worth RM249 if you sign up now. The overall package is pretty much a bargain if you can live with good GPS but with so so performance on the device. As usual, hit the source link to browse the phone page

source Digi

October Threat Landscape Report Highlights Increased Zeus/Money Mule Risk

October Fortinet Threat Landscape Report highlights few key points on the increased of Zeus/Money Mule risks as follows

  1. Fortinet today announced its October 2010 Threat Landscape Report which warns of increased Zeus activity and the related risks money mules take when signing up for questionable job opportunities.
  2. Money mules have been aggressively recruited this year to help cyber criminals launder money.
  3. Fortinet’s Money Mule warning signs and key guidelines on how to prevent someone from inadvertently becoming a money mule.

Further reading could be found on the press release

Fortinet October Threat Landscape Report Highlights Increased Zeus/Money Mule Risks

Report Offers Money Mule Recruitment Warning Signs

MALAYSIA, 29 October, 2010 Fortinet – a leading network security provider and the worldwide leader of unified threat management (UTM) solutions – today announced its October 2010 Threat Landscape report, which warns of increased Zeus activity and the related risks money mules take when signing up for questionable job opportunities.

“As outlined in our ‘2010 Threat Predictions Realized’ report, money mules have been aggressively recruited this year to help cyber criminals launder money,” said Derek Manky, project manager, cyber security and threat research, Fortinet. “A recent example of this is the worldwide prosecutions of a Zeus criminal operation, which included 37 charges brought against alleged money mules.”

Recent Zeus stories illustrate how prevalent money mules have become and how they are being used to filter, disguise and spread money transfers. Mules today are typically recruited into criminal organizations through legitimate-looking advertisements. A suspect ad may suggest a client is looking for a “payment processing agent,” “money transfer agent,” or something as general and vague as an “administrative representative.” These recruitment ads can be found anywhere from print and online job sites to direct points of contact. While many mules likely enter into the business relationship knowing the full criminal implications of what they’re doing, there are a surprising number that do not.

Preying on the Desperation of Job Seekers

One of the most recent money mule recruitment emails FortiGuard flagged this month began the subject line with, “Re: CV.” The body of the email offered the recipient an “administrative representative” position for a proposed salary of 5,000 per month plus commission. One of the listed job duties was to “administer day-to-day financial responsibilities for clients,” as well as prepare weekly financial reports.

“The majority of opportunities we’re seeing today offer prospects roughly 10 percent commission for any transfers they make,” Manky continued. “With a few simple clicks, a $10,000 transfer could net the mule roughly $1,000.”

Money Mule Warning Signs

The following guidelines can be used to help prevent someone from inadvertently becoming a money mule:

· If the job offer sounds too good to be true, then it probably is. Be wary of any job opportunities that promise great rewards for little or no work or work experience.

· If the job description is vague, unclear and/or doesn’t stipulate who you would be reporting to in the new position, then do deeper research into the company to get those questions answered.

· Be especially scrupulous with regards to money transfer job offers that are coming from overseas, as they can be very difficult to research and verify. If the company in question doesn’t have verifiable contact information (phone, email contact and address) on their web site, think twice about working with them.

· Be cognizant of any company that asks for a personal bank account number as the means through which money is expected to flow. Recruiters will typically mandate that their mules use anonymous money transferring services for outbound funds; as with any scam, be cautious of a request such as this.

· Security services such as antispam and web content filtering can also help to minimize money mule recruitment attempts, as they could help flag the recruitment emails, or potentially warn or block specific illegitimate job recruitment domains.

· Anyone suspecting they may have been a victim of this type of crime should contact their bank immediately.

FortiGuard Labs compiled threat statistics and trends for October based on data collected from FortiGate network security appliances and intelligence systems in production worldwide. Customers who use Fortinet’s FortiGuard Services should already be protected against the threats outlined in this report.

FortiGuard Services offer broad security solutions including antivirus, intrusion prevention, Web content filtering and anti-spam capabilities. These services help protect against threats on both application and network layers. FortiGuard Services are updated by FortiGuard Labs, which enables Fortinet to deliver a combination of multi-layered security intelligence and zero-day protection from new and emerging threats. For customers with a subscription to FortiGuard, these updates are delivered to all FortiGate, FortiMail and FortiClient products.

The full October Threat Landscape report, which includes the top threat rankings in several categories, is available now. Ongoing research can be found in the FortiGuard Center or via FortiGuard Labs’ RSS feed. Additional discussion on security technologies and threat analysis can be found at the Fortinet Security Blog.

Samsung Galaxy Tab Tablet Hit Maxis Stores Beginning Last Week

5142825480 b5e598b04c Samsung Galaxy Tab Tablet Hit Maxis Stores Beginning Last Week

One of the most anticipated gadget this year finally hit our shores beginning last week, via Maxis. The price though is little bit steep at RM2699 without contract, or RM1749 or RM1849 for 12 months and 24 months contract respectively. The contract is varies from RM108 and onward for 500MB worth of data plus voice plan, which I feel is unnecessary as tablet is used mostly for non-voice usage.

Samsung Galaxy Tab is 7 inch tablet running on Android 2.2. It comes with Wifi and 3G connectivity and using normal sim card, unlike iPad that used micro sim. Powering it is 1Ghz processor with 16GB storage to store your data. Samsung Galaxy Tab is regarded by many tech blog as true competitor to iPad, but as it is pricing closed to iPad which run on IOS that specifically tailored for tablet sized screen, iPad still has the edge over Samsung Galaxy Tab, at least for now.

Source : Maxis