Friday, 30 January 2015

Saudi Arabia faces ISIS threats during transition of new king - Blog

Saudi Arabia faces ISIS threats during transition of new king 

ISIS recruits from Saudi Arabia have their sights set on seizing their oil-rich homeland, and may be preparing to strike while the Kingdom's throne is changing hands, according to Middle East intelligence experts.

A division of the Islamic State, or ISIS, reportedly released a video stating its intention to invade Saudi Arabia, an oil-rich nation and powerful U.S. ally transitioning after the death of its former king. The threat was issued by a group of Saudi militants who have joined the militant group in Iraq and Syria, and also urged sympathizers inside the Kingdom to attack from within, SITE Intelligence, an organization that tracks jihadist propaganda, reported. The grim warning underscores the terror organization's desire to annex the Middle East's wealthiest nation, said experts, as well as the country that is home to the most holy site in the Muslim world, Mecca.

"It's kind of difficult not to think of Medina and Mecca as the Islamic militants' biggest prize," Toby Matthiesen, a research fellow at the University of Cambridge and author of "The Other Saudis," told FoxNews.com. "Maybe  Jerusalem, but if its goal is to re-establish the caliphate, those cities are important."


Islamic State, which claims a caliphate that stretches across parts of Iraq and Syria, has recruited thousands of fighters from Saudi Arabia, and has indicated before its designs on the Kingdom. Newsweek, citing a Twitter post by a popular anti-Saudi user, reported that a small group of militants staged a late-night attack on a border position and claimed to reach the northern town of Rafha. There has been no official confirmation of the attack, but social media war playing out between the kingdom and militants.


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Wednesday, 28 January 2015

Amazon WorkMail Cloud-Based Email and Calendar Service Announced - Blog

Amazon WorkMail Cloud-Based Email and Calendar Service Announced


US online giant Amazon announced plans Wednesday to offer a cloud-based email and calendar service to directly compete with Microsoft Outlook and others.

The service dubbed Amazon WorkMail "enables users to send and receive email, manage contacts, share calendars, and book resources using the same email applications they use today" including Outlook and services like Google Apps.

The service appears aimed at corporate customers that currently pay for Microsoft Outlook or other services.Amazon, offering the service through its cloud unit Amazon Web Services, will charge $4 per user per month and include 50GB of mailbox storage for each user.


The service may also be bundled with Amazon WorkDocs, a file storage service previously known as Zocalo.



The service "is fully compatible with Microsoft Outlook, and customers can quickly integrate Amazon WorkMail with their existing corporate directory, choose encryption keys, select the location where they want their data to reside, and pay only for the mailboxes they create," Amazon said in a statement.

"Customers have repeatedly asked us for a business email and calendaring service that is more cost-effective and simpler to manage than their on-premises solution, more secure than the cloud-based offerings available today, and that is backed by the same best-in-class infrastructure platform on which they're reliably running so many of their current (and future) workloads," said Peter De Santis, vice president at Amazon Web Services.


"We built Amazon WorkMail to address these requests and to help businesses achieve agility and cost savings."

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Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Facebook, Instagram, Tinder TITSUP: HOW did anyone even FIND OUT? - Blog

Facebook, Instagram, Tinder TITSUP: HOW did anyone even FIND OUT?


Updated It appears Facebook and its snap-slinging subsidiary Instagram have fallen off the web. Hook-up-finder Tinder is also reportedly having problems.

As of 22.45 Pacific Time on Monday, (06.45 UTC Tuesday) the websites and apps are apparently still suffering a widespread outage, which kicked off about 40 minutes ago.

Facebook bought Instagram for $715m in 2012, and snapped up WhatsApp for $22bn last year. It's hoped the chat app will remain up and running while its sister sites are down, leaving millions unable to use their accounts.

There's no word on why Tinder is down, though. Presumably the FBI will turn up soon to blame North Korea."We're aware of an outage affecting Instagram and are working on a fix. Thank you for your patience,"said an Instagram spokesman on arch-rival Twitter as El Reg was going to press.

It's possible Facebook et al are facing a distributed denial-of-service attack; millions of people constantly hitting refresh in their web browsers could be exacerbating whatever has knocked the sites offline, though. Lizard Squad appears to be gloating about the downtime, but that could mean anything and nothing.


The downtime comes right as the US East Coast prepares to be hit by an incoming snow storm:we have no idea how they'll cope penned up indoors without being able to swap pics and tales of the cold – nor keep warm with the help of Tinder.


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Monday, 26 January 2015

Wikileaks says Google attacked journalism for handing over staffer mails to US govt - Blog

 Wikileaks says Google attacked journalism for handing over staffer mails to US govt


Geneva: WikiLeaks has lashed out at internet giant Google for handing over its staffers’ emails and digital data to US authorities without swiftly informing the whistleblowing site, terming it “an attack on journalism and journalists, especially those working on security issues”.Baltazar Garzon, Director of WikiLeaks’ co-founder Julian Assange’s defence team, yesterday said the dangerous implication is that “anything that has to do with whistleblowing is being differentiated from journalism”.


On December 24 last year, Google informed WikiLeaks that it handed over the information under secret search warrants issued by a US federal judge in March 2012, almost two and a half years after the incident.The warrants, citing an espionage, fraud and conspiracy investigation, required the web giant to hand over the phone numbers, IP addresses, credit card details, contents of all emails and other details for Google accounts used by three of WikiLeaks staffers, Sarah Harrison, Kristinn Hrafnsson and Joseph Faerrell.The data collected contained all correspondence prior to March 22, 2012.

According to the WikiLeaks lawyers, the warrant for email data says that the US Justice department is investigating WikiLeaks for “conspiracy to commit espionage”.Garzon added that it is difficult to believe that a case like this exists in the 21st century and said the UN Special Rapporteur is mandated by Human Rights Council resolution to protect against harassment directed at a person’s freedom of opinion and expression including as a matter of high priority such harassment against journalists.

Hrafsson said journalists cannot assume that any correspondence is safe and have to encrypt to ensure safety of their sources.“If you are working against the other side of the Atlantic there is a real possibility of being branded a terrorist through the outdated Espionage Act of 1917,” he said.Hrafsson had around 35,000 emails in his Inbox including deleted ones from the time he was working as a journalist in Iceland.


The legal team of Assange has shot off three letters – one to Google Chairperson Eric Schmidt, second to Attorney General of the US Eric Holder and third to the eastern court of Virginia.In a letter to Schmidt, Garzon has asked for “an inventory” of everything that Google has provided to the US authorities. The legal team is also currently exploring legal possibilities against Google and the US government.

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Thursday, 22 January 2015

US and Cuba clash on human rights - Blog


The United States and Cuba ended two days of historic talks in Havana with some progress toward restoring diplomatic ties after half a century of estrangement.

But there remain sharp differences over the role of human rights in their new relationship.
"As a central element of our policy, we pressed the Cuban government for improved human rights conditions, including freedom of expression," said Roberta Jacobson, the senior US diplomat for Latin America and most senior American official to visit the island country in more than three decades.


In Spanish, however, her statement said the US "pressured" Cuba on the issue.

"Cuba has never responded to pressure," Josefina Vidal, Cuba's senior diplomat for US affairs, responded.


The comments reflected long-standing positions of their governments and it was not clear whether the issue, which has previously blocked closer US-Cuban relations, would pose a threat to the new diplomatic process.


Yet it laid bare the pressures each side faces at home - the US, from Republican leaders in Congress and powerful Cuban-American groups and Cuba, from hardliners deeply concerned that rapprochement could undermine the communist system founded by Fidel Castro.
In the first face-to-face talks since last month's declaration of detente, the two countries laid out a detailed agenda for re-establishing full diplomatic relations. Further talks were planned.


Ms Jacobson hailed the discussions as "positive and productive," focusing on the mechanics of converting interest sections into full-fledged embassies headed by ambassadors.
But she also spoke of "profound differences" separating the two governments and said embassies by themselves would not mean normalised ties.
"We have to overcome more than 50 years of a relationship that was not based on confidence or trust," she said.


Along with human rights, Cuba outlined other obstacles in the relationship. Ms Vidal demanded that Cuba be taken off the US list of state sponsors of terrorism.
However, she praised President Barack Obama for easing the US trade embargo and urging the US Congress to lift it entirely.


"It was a first meeting. This is a process," she said. In the next weeks, she added, the US and Cuba will schedule a second round of talks, which may or may not be the time to finalise an agreement.
Issues on yesterday's agenda included ending caps on staff, limits on diplomats' movements and, in the case of the US building, removing guard posts and other Cuban structures along the perimeter.


The US and Cuba also talked about human trafficking, environmental protection, American rules to allow greater telecommunications exports to Cuba and how to co-ordinate responses to oil spills or Ebola outbreaks.

The need for at least one future round of talks could set back US hopes of reopening the embassies before April's Summit of the Americas, which Mr Obama and Mr Castro are expected to attend.


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Wednesday, 21 January 2015

WhatsApp finally makes the jump to your web browser - Blog

WhatsApp finally makes the jump to your web browser


The new messaging service currently only works with Google's Chrome browser and will not be available to iPhone users "due to Apple platform limitations," according to WhatsApp.

The popular mobile messaging application WhatsApp, acquired by Facebook last year for nearly USD 22 billion, has unveiled a new service for sending messages from a Web browser.
WhatsApp, which claims some 500 million users, said its Web service will be a "mirror" and would require an Internet- connected phone to work.


"Our Web client is simply an extension of your phone: the Web browser mirrors conversations and messages from your mobile device - this means all of your messages still live on your phone," WhatsApp said in a blog post.


The new messaging service currently only works with Google's Chrome browser and will not be available to iPhone users "due to Apple platform limitations," according to WhatsApp.
Facebook in October completed its buy of WhatsApp in a stock-and-cash deal.

The acquisition highlighted the stunning growth of mobile messaging but also prompted analyst questions on the price paid by Facebook and future plans for the service.

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