Wednesday, November 30, 2011

AP IMPACT: More kids skip school shots in 8 states (AP)

ATLANTA ? More parents are opting out of school shots for their kids. In eight states now, more than 1 in 20 public school kindergartners aren't getting all the vaccines required for attendance, an Associated Press analysis found.

That growing trend among parents seeking vaccine exemptions has health officials worried about outbreaks of diseases that once were all but stamped out.

The AP analysis found more than half of states have seen at least a slight rise in the rate of exemptions over the past five years. States with the highest exemption rates are in the West and Upper Midwest.

It's "really gotten much worse," said Mary Selecky, secretary of health for Washington state, where 6 percent of public school parents have opted out.

Rules for exemptions vary by state and can include medical, religious or ? in some states ? philosophical reasons.

Reasons for skipping some school shots vary. Some parents are skeptical that vaccines are essential. Others fear vaccines carry their own risks. Some find it easier to check a box opting out than the effort to get the shots and required paperwork schools demand. Still others are ambivalent, believing in older vaccines but questioning newer shots against, say, chickenpox.

The number of shots is also giving some parents pause. By the time most children are 6, they will have been stuck with a needle about two dozen times ? with many of those shots given in infancy. The cumulative effect of all those shots has not been studied enough, some parents say.

"Many of the vaccines are unnecessary and public health officials don't honestly know what the effect of giving so many vaccines to such small children really are," said Jennifer Margulis, a mother of four and parenting book author in Ashland, Ore.

But few serious problems have turned up over years of vaccinations and several studies have shown no link with autism, a theory from the 1990s that has been widely discredited.

To be sure, childhood vaccination rates remain high overall, at 90 percent or better for several vaccines, including those for polio, measles, hepatitis B and even chickenpox. In many states, exemptions are filed for fewer than 1 percent of children entering school for the first time.

Health officials have not identified an exemption threshold that would likely lead to outbreaks. But as they push for 100 percent immunization, they worry when some states have exemption rates climbing over 5 percent. The average state exemption rate has been estimated at less than half that.

Even more troubling are pockets in some states where exemption rates much higher. In some rural counties in northeast Washington, for example, vaccination exemption rates in recent years have been above 20 percent and even as high as 50 percent.

"Vaccine refusers tend to cluster," said Saad Omer, an Emory University epidemiologist who has done extensive research on the issue.

While parents may think it does no harm to others if their kids skip some vaccines, they are in fact putting others at risk, health officials say. No vaccine is completely effective. If an outbreak begins in an unvaccinated group of children, a vaccinated child may still be at some risk of getting sick.

Studies have found communities with higher exemption rates sometimes are places where measles have suddenly re-emerged in outbreaks. Vaccinated kids are sometimes among the cases, or children too young to be vaccinated. Last year, California had more than 2,100 whooping cough cases, and 10 infants died. Only one had received a first dose of vaccine.

"Your child's risk of getting disease depends on what your neighbors do," said Omer.

And while it seems unlikely that diseases like polio and diphtheria could ever make a comeback to the U.S., immunization expert Dr. Lance Rodewald with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it could happen.

"Polio can come back. China was polio free for two decades, and just this year, they were infected from Pakistan, and there is a big outbreak of polio China now. The same could happen here," Rodewald said in an email.

He cited outbreaks of Hib, a disease that can lead to meningitis, among the Amish who don't consistently vaccinate their children. Russia had a huge diphtheria outbreak in the early to mid-1990s, he said, because vaccine coverage declined. "Measles is just visible, but it isn't the only concern," Rodewald said.

For its review, the AP asked state health departments for kindergarten exemption rates for 2006-07 and 2010-11. The AP also looked at data states had previously reported to the federal government. (Most states don't have data for the current 2011-12 school year.)

Alaska had the highest exemption rate in 2010-11, at nearly 9 percent. Colorado's rate was 7 percent, Minnesota 6.5 percent, Vermont and Washington 6 percent, and Oregon, Michigan and Illinois were close behind.

Mississippi was lowest, at essentially 0 percent.

The AP found that vaccine exemptions rose in more than half of states, and 10 had increases over the five years of about 1.5 percentage points or more, a range health officials say is troubling.

Those states, too, were in the West and Midwest ? Alaska, Kansas, Hawaii, Illinois, Michigan, Montana, Oregon, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin. Arizona saw an increase that put that state in the same ballpark.

Exemption seekers are often middle-class, college-educated white people, but there are often a mix of views and philosophies. Exemption hot spots like Sedona, Ariz., and rural northeast Washington have concentrations of both alternative medicine-preferring as well as government-fearing libertarians.

Opposition to vaccines "is putting people together that normally would not be together," observed Elizabeth Jacobs, a University of Arizona epidemiologist looking at that state's rising exemption rates.

What many of exemption-seeking parents share, however, is a mental calculation that the dangers to their children of vaccine-preventable diseases are less important than the possible harms from vaccine. Or they just don't believe health officials, putting more stock in alternative sources ? often discovered through Internet searches.

"We are being told this by every government official, teacher, doctor that we need vaccines to keep us safe from these diseases. I simply don't believe that to be true. I believe all the diseases in question were up to 90 percent in decline before mass vaccines ever were given. I don't think vaccines are what saved the world from disease. I think effective sewer systems, nutrition, and handwashing (are the reasons)," said Sabrina Paulick, of Ashland, Ore. She's part-time as a caregiver for elderly people in their homes and a mother of a 4-year-old daughter.

Parents say they'd like to reserve the right to decide what vaccinations their children should get, and when. Health officials reply that vaccinations are recommended at an early age to protect children before they encounter a dangerous infection. "If you delay, you're putting a child at risk," said Gerri Yett, a nurse who manages Alaska's immunization program.

Analyzing vaccination exemptions is difficult. States collect data differently; some base their exemption rates on just a small sample of schools ? Alaska, for example ? while others rely on more comprehensive numbers. So the AP worked with researchers at CDC, which statistically adjusted some states' 2010-11 data for a better comparison.

It's also not clear when an exemption was invoked against all vaccines and when it was used to excuse just one or two shots. CDC officials think the second scenario is more common.

Also, states differ on some of the vaccines required and what's needed to get an exemption: Sometimes only a box on a form needs to be checked, while some states want letters or even signed statements from doctors.

Meanwhile, some parent groups and others have pushed legislators to make exemptions easier or do away with vaccination requirements altogether. The number of states allowing philosophical exemptions grew from 15 to 20 in the last decade.

Some in public health are exasperated by the trend.

"Every time we give them evidence (that vaccines are safe), they come back with a new hypothesis" for why vaccines could be dangerous, said Kacey Ernst, another University of Arizona researcher.

The exemption increases have come during a time when the government has been raising its estimates of how many children have autism and related disorders. Some experts suggest that parents have listened intently to that message, with some believing the growing roster of recommended shots must somehow be related.

"I don't understand how other people don't see that these two things are related," said Stacy Allan, a Summit, N.J., mother who filed religious exemptions and stopped vaccinating her three children.

Several parents said that while they believe many health officials mean well, their distrust of the vaccine-making pharmaceutical industry only continues to grow.

"I wouldn't be one to say I am absolutely certain these things are hurting our children," said Michele Pereira, an Ashland mother of two young girls. She is a registered nurse and married to an anesthesiologist. While her daughters have had some vaccinations, they have not had the full recommended schedule.

"I feel like there are enough questions out there that I don't want to take the chance," she said.

___

Associated Press writer Jeff Barnard in Grants Pass, Ore., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_he_me/us_med_skipping_school_shots

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That rarest of creatures, the white Nokia N9, should appear before Christmas

A poet would say it's like a piece of ivory: both beautiful and sad. Meanwhile, Nokia's official blog says the white N9 is coming to the UK before the end of the year with a rarefied 64GB of on-board storage. We have no idea as to the price, but we suspect dedicated MeeGo memento hunters will hardly care.

Update: Oh hell, sorry Britannia. We actually meant to say it's coming to all those (not very many) countries where the N9 is already available. Nokia confirmed to us today that it's on target to supply white N9s to those markets in December. Everyone else will have to get it via a price-inflated import. Apologies for the bad geography.

Continue reading That rarest of creatures, the white Nokia N9, should appear before Christmas

That rarest of creatures, the white Nokia N9, should appear before Christmas originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 06:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/30/that-rarest-of-creatures-the-white-nokia-n9-should-appear-befo/

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Minnesota judge puts NBA court proceedings on hold (AP)

MINNEAPOLIS ? A Minnesota federal judge has put the legal fight between the NBA's players and owners on hold to give the two sides time to finish their collective bargaining agreement.

U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz granted a request by the players and issued a stay of all court proceedings on Tuesday. The stay is valid until Dec. 9, by which time a formal collective bargaining agreement is expected to be approved.

The two sides reached a tentative agreement Saturday and are now in the process of completing the negotiations. Before the proposal can be approved, the players must re-form their union and some secondary issues must be resolved.

If the deal is ratified, training camps are tentatively scheduled to open Dec. 9.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_nba_labor_courts

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Dow, S&P up for 2nd day but financials a drag (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? The Dow and S&P 500 advanced for a second day on Tuesday as consumer confidence data was stronger than expected and investors eyed further progress on a solution to Europe's fiscal mess.

But weak financial shares limited the advance, with the S&P financial index (.GSPF) down 0.4 percent. Shares of Bank of America (BAC.N) dropped 2.7 percent to $5.11, on track for their worst close since March 2009. The Nasdaq also was lower.

"There seems to be some movement on the European front, but things certainly haven't been resolved. Financials are taking a step back, and are kind of keeping a cap on the market as a whole," said Thomas Villalta, portfolio manager for Jones Villalta Asset Management in Austin, Texas.

In a positive sign for the euro zone, Italian bond yields fell from session highs, though they were still at record high rates. In the auction, Italy's government sold 7.5 billion euros of three- and 10-year bonds, close to the upper end of its target range.

In addition, investors also eyed a meeting of European officials in hopes they will make a step forward in resolving the region's debt crisis.

In the United States, the Conference Board, an industry group, said its index of consumer confidence jumped to its highest level since July, handily topping economists' forecasts.

The news followed record Black Friday sales, giving investors hope that the holiday shopping season will be a solid one for retailers.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was up 55.29 points, or 0.48 percent, at 11,578.30. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 4.14 points, or 0.35 percent, at 1,196.69. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was down 8.01 points, or 0.32 percent, at 2,519.33.

On Monday, U.S. stocks rebounded sharply from seven days of losses, with the S&P closing up nearly 3 percent.

Weakness in some large-cap Internet stocks weighed on the Nasdaq after strong gains in those stocks on Monday. Amazon.com (AMZN.O) dropped 2.3 percent to $189.62.

AMR Corp (AMR.N) plunged 78.4 percent to about 35 cents a share after the parent of American Airlines filed for bankruptcy protection and named a new chairman and chief executive. The stock was halted more than a dozen times throughout the day.

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Additional reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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96% The Artist

An instant classic, THE ARTIST is a joy from beginning to end. A silent love letter to the early days of cinema, this masterpiece uses sound or the lack thereof in such imaginative ways, has completely charming performances by its leads, Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo, and has the precise look and feel of a film made in the 1920's. Back in the 70s, Mel Brooks spoofed the silent era with SILENT MOVIE, and there are many similarities here, although THE ARTIST relies almost entirely on character and charm, whereas Mel Brooks leaned heavily on slapstick. Writer/Director Michel Hazanavicius clearly loves the language of film, how a series of retakes chronicles the development of the love story, how the unexpected sound of an object on a desk can take the audience's breath away, how the sight of a large crowd of women jumping for joy at the sight of our movie star takes you right back to newsreel images from the time. Every frame of this film is filled with a sense of wonder and yet it's remarkably light on its feet. Look at the way Penelope Ann Miller's unhappy housewife gets the very endearing detail of doodling over pictures of her celebrity husband, or how Missi Pyle hilariously gives us her whole relationship with her co-star in a single glance. A stunning shot inside the famous Bradbury Building left me saying "Wow". If you love movies, you're gonna swoon over this one.

November 13, 2011

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_artist/

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

NASA launches largest-ever Mars rover

Reporting from Cape Canaveral, Fla.?

With the roar of an Atlas 5 engine, NASA on Saturday began its boldest venture yet to another planet ? sending the Mars Science Laboratory on an eight-month journey expected to provide more detailed information about whether the Red Planet is, or ever has been, hospitable to life.

After a one-day delay to replace a faulty battery, the launch went off flawlessly at 7:02 a.m. PST, the rocket rising on a column of white smoke into a blue sky mottled with puffy cumulus clouds.

"Whew! That felt so good," said Joy Crisp, a deputy project scientist with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Ca?ada Flintridge, as the rocket trailed out of sight. "That was spectacular!"

Its payload was the rover Curiosity, the largest and most sophisticated in a series of robotic vehicles that NASA has sent to Mars. Built at JPL, Curiosity is a six-wheeled, one-ton vehicle the size of a compact car that is bristling with an array of sophisticated scientific gadgets.

Its mission, NASA officials have stressed, is not to find life on Mars, but to find out whether life ever could have existed there in the form of microbes, tiny organisms that are abundant on Earth. It also will try to find further evidence to suggest whether astronauts could survive on Mars, part of NASA's long-term plan to send a manned mission there.

"I like to say it's extraterrestrial real estate appraisal," Pan Conrad, a NASA astrobiologist, said at a pre-launch briefing earlier in the week.

Some 43 minutes after launch, a second stage rocket fell away, leaving the science lab capsule on its own. Control of the spaceship then shifted from the Kennedy Space Center to JPL, which will run the mission for its duration, expected to be a minimum of two years.

A group of JPL scientists and engineers at Kennedy burst into applause when the capsule separated from the rocket. Like most people associated with the mission, they were excited and relieved by the successful launch. Many have worked on the Mars Science Laboratory for nearly a decade and had to endure a two-year delay when the project missed its original launch date.

Pete Theisinger, the project manager at JPL, couldn't stop grinning when he got up to speak at a news conference after the launch. "Our spacecraft is in excellent health and it's on its way to Mars," he said. "Any questions?"

The lab faces a journey of 354 million miles. (Although Mars is less than half that distance from Earth, the fact that it is a moving target makes the trip longer.) It is due to land in spectacular fashion just after 10 p.m. PDT on Aug. 5.

Because of the size of the rover, NASA decided that its previous landing technique, in which vehicles were bounced onto the surface of the planet on air bags, would not work. So Curiosity, after being slowed in its descent by parachutes, will be lowered softly ? NASA hopes ? on long bridles using a sky crane technique modeled after those used by helicopters.

Once on the ground, NASA intends for the rover to spend one Martian year, or about two Earth years, exploring an area called Gale Crater, the site of a gently sloped, 3-mile-tall mountain made of sedimentary rock. As with prior missions, there is the likelihood that the rover will keep going after its two-year "warranty" expires.

Scientists hope that as the rover ascends the mountain, the rock will tell the geologic history of the area ? and ideally suggest whether the planet could have supported life. That would require the presence of three things: water, energy and carbon. The first two have been established as existing on Mars, but previous missions have not allowed scientists to determine whether there is carbon.

"We're basically reading the history of Mars' environmental evolution," John Grotzinger, the project's chief scientist, said at one of the pre-launch briefings. However, he has been at pains to tamp down expectations.

"It's like looking for a needle in a haystack," he said, "and the haystack's as big as a football field."

Scientists believe it is more likely that Curiosity will find other indications of environmental conditions that point toward the possibility that life once existed on Mars, when it was warmer and wetter than it is today.

The researchers said they were excited by the opportunity to deploy some of Curiosity's new technology. One gadget, called a "chem cam," will use a laser to zap rocks, then analyze the resulting sparks with a spectrometer to identify the chemical elements in the material.

Curiosity also has a lab in its belly that will allow it to take soil and rock samples, analyzing their chemistry and mineralogy. And it will deploy an array of cameras to bring back high-definition still photographs and videos to Earth.

Such technology doesn't come cheap, and NASA officials were asked Saturday if they could justify the $2.5 billion being spent on the Mars Science Lab at a time of great need. Grotzinger said the cost, divided among the entire U.S. population, amounted to no more than the cost of a movie ticket per person. (It works out to about $8.)

"I'll leave it to you whether that's a movie you want to see," he said, adding: "This is the stuff that fuels kids' imaginations to go into science and engineering.? I think that's a great investment."

Mars program director Doug McCuistion said the space program also contributes to the economy by creating "high-tech, good-paying" jobs. "We don't spend any money on Mars," he said. "We spend it all here."

The Mars Science Lab is the latest in a series of U.S. missions to the Red Planet, dating to 1964 when Mariner 4 flew by and sent 21 photos back to Earth. More recently, the Pathfinder, Exploration and Opportunity missions landed robotic rovers that transmitted dramatic ground-level photos and other data about Mars ? considered the most likely planet in our solar system other than Earth to have nurtured life.

By "life," however, scientists stress that they mean the most primitive forms, and don't expect Curiosity to be met by an ambassador.

At the same time, said Steven Benner, a biochemist who heads the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution, "we don't want to have a lot of preconceptions. We want to consider that if, you know, Tim Allen's 'Galaxy Quest' alien rock creature comes up and bangs us on the head, we don't want to ignore it. That would be the 'aha!' moment that we would regret having missed. But that's relatively far down in our what-if scenarios."

mitchell.landsberg@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/2XhvsFyl5HY/la-me-adv-mars-launch-20111127,0,1070468.story

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Researchers: Millions of printers open to hackers

Columbia University

This time-lapsed image of a screen on an HP LaserJet shows the impact of a rogue print job used to reprogram the device.

By Bob Sullivan

Could a hacker from half-way around the planet control your printer and give it instructions so frantic that it could eventually catch fire? Or use a hijacked printer as a copy machine for criminals, making it easy to commit identity theft or even take control of entire networks that would otherwise be secure?

It?s not only possible, but likely, say researchers at Columbia University, who claim they've discovered a new class of computer security flaws that could impact millions of businesses, consumers, and even government agencies.

Printers can be remotely controlled by computer criminals over the Internet, with the potential to steal personal information, attack otherwise secure networks and even cause physical damage, the researchers argue in a vulnerability warning first reported by msnbc.com.? They say there's no easy fix for the flaw they?ve identified in some Hewlett-Packard LaserJet printer lines ? and perhaps on other firms? printers, too?? and there's no way to tell if hackers have already exploited it.


The researchers, who have working quietly for months in an electronics lab under a series of government and industry grants, described the flaw in a private briefing for federal agencies two weeks ago. They?told Hewlett-Packard about it last week.

HP said Monday that it is still reviewing details of the vulnerability, and is unable to confirm or deny many of the researchers? claims, but generally disputes the researchers? characterization of the flaw as widespread.? Keith Moore, chief technologist for HP's printer division, said the firm "takes this very seriously,? but his initial research suggests the likelihood that the vulnerability can be exploited in the real world is low in most cases. ?????

?Until we verify the security issue, it is difficult to comment,? he said, adding that the firm cannot say yet what printer models are impacted.

But the Columbia researchers say the security vulnerability is?so fundamental that it?may impact tens of millions of printers and other hardware that use hard-to-update ?firmware? that?s flawed.

'Crystal clear'
The flaw involves firmware that runs so-called "embedded systems" such as computer printers, which increasingly are packed with functions that make them operate more like full-fledged computers. They also are commonly connected to the Internet.?

"The problem is, technology companies aren't really looking into this corner of the Internet. But we are," said Columbia professor Salvatore Stolfo, who directed the research in the Computer Science Department of Columbia University?s School of Engineering and Applied Science. ?The research on this is crystal clear.? The impact of this is very large. These devices are completely open and available to be exploited.?

Printer security flaws have long been theorized, but the Columbia researchers say they've discovered the first-ever doorway into millions of printers worldwide.? In one demonstration of an attack based on the flaw, Stolfo and fellow researcher Ang Cui showed how a hijacked computer could be given instructions that would continuously heat up the printer?s fuser ? which is designed to dry the ink once it?s applied to paper ?? eventually causing the paper to turn brown and smoke.

In that demonstration, a thermal switch shut the printer down ? basically, causing it to self-destruct ? before a fire started, but the researchers believe other printers might be used as fire starters, giving computer hackers a dangerous new tool that could allow simple computer code to wreak real-world havoc.

Hewlett Packard, in a statement, said all its printers include such thermal switches, and these would prevent a printer fire in all cases.

"(The thermal breaker) cannot be overcome by a firmware change or this proposed vulnerability," it said.

Click here to read H-P's full statement issued in response to this story.

Cui and Stolfo say they've reverse engineered software that controls common Hewlett-Packard LaserJet printers. Those printers allow firmware upgrades through a process called "Remote Firmware Update." Every time the printer accepts a job, it checks to see if a software update is included in that job.? But they say printers they examined don't discriminate the source of the update software ? a typical digital signature is not used to verify the upgrade software?s authenticity ? so anyone can instruct the printer to erase its operating software and install a booby-trapped version.

In all cases, the Columbia researchers claim, duping a would-be target into printing a virus-laden document is enough to take control of that person's printer; but in some cases, printers are configured to accept print jobs via the Internet, meaning the virus can be installed remotely, without any interaction by the printer's owner.

?It's like selling a car without selling the keys to lock it,? Stolfo said. ?It?s totally insecure.?

Columbia University

Columbia researcher Ang Cui explains how he was able to infect an HP printer with malicious code.

Rewriting the printer's firmware takes only about 30 seconds, and a virus would be virtually impossible to detect once installed. Only pulling the computer chips out of the printer and testing them would reveal an attack, Cui said.? No modern antivirus software has the ability to scan, let alone fix, the software which runs on embedded chips in a printer.

?First of all, how the hell doesn't HP have a signature or certificate indicating that new firmware is real firmware from HP?? said Mikko Hypponen, head of research at security firm F-Secure, when told of the flaw. ?Printers have been a weak spot for many corporate networks.? Many people don?t realize that a? printer is just another computer on a network with exactly the same problems and, if compromised, the same impact.?

There are plenty of points of contention between HP and the researchers, however. Moore, the HP executive, said the firm?s newer printers do require digitally signed firmware upgrades, and have since 2009. The printers tested by the researchers are older models, Moore said.?

In contrast, the Columbia researchers say they purchased one of the printers they hacked in September at a major New York City office supply store.

Moore also said that the impact of any potential vulnerability is limited because most home users have InkJet printers ? not LaserJet printers ? and they do not permit remote firmware upgrade, he said.

Still, a widespread flaw in LaserJet printers would raise serious issues. Hewlett Packard dominates the printer market; the firm says it's sold 100 million LaserJet printers since 1984, meaning millions of computers could be vulnerable. HP, by far the dominant printer seller worldwide with 42 percent of the market, sells about 50 million printers of all kinds annually, according to IDC.

In an exclusive demonstration for msnbc.com at Columbia University?s Intrusion Detection Systems Laboratory, Cui and Stolfo revealed the kind of havoc an attacker could wreak once they gained control of a printer. After sending a virus-laced print job to a target printer, the device's small screen read, in sequence, "Erasing...Programming...Code Update Complete."

In one demonstration, Cui printed a tax return on an infected printer, which in turn sent the tax form to a second computer playing the part of a hacker?s machine. The latter computer then scanned the document for critical information such as Social Security numbers, and when it found one, automatically published it on a Twitter feed.

A hacker who merely wanted to wreak havoc could easily disable thousands?? or perhaps millions?? of vulnerable printers, Cui said, as it is trivial to send the printer upgrades that would render it inoperable. ?

Beachhead?
But the researchers say the possibilities created by hijacked printers go far beyond pranks or identity theft.?Printers on a company network are nearly always trusted by other computers. A hijacked printer could act as a beachhead to attack a company's network that was otherwise protected by a firewall. Few companies are prepared to protect themselves from an attack by their own printer.

Moore also disagreed with this assertion. He said standard print jobs could not be used to initiate a firmware upgrade; only specially-crafted files sent directly to the printer can do that. Were that true, the vulnerability could only be exploited on printers left exposed to the Internet; printers behind a firewall would be safe.

?This (vulnerability) is probably not as broad as what I had heard in their first announcement,? Moore said. ?It sounds like we disagree on what the exposure might be.?

But the Columbia researchers say standard print commands sent both from a Macintosh computer and?a PC running Linux tricked an HP printer into reprogramming itself. Moore later conceded that might be true; but the two sides disagreed on whether users in a Microsoft Windows environment were safe from the attack.

Even home users with printers that are not directly connected to the Internet are at risk, Cui said.? As long as the printer is connected to a computer ? through a USB cable, for example ? ?it could be used to launch attacks, or as part of a botnet.

A quick scan of unprotected printers left open to Internet attack by the researchers found 40,000 devices that they said could be infected within minutes.?

Cui discovered the lack of authentication by physically disassembling the printer, and painstakingly reading output from its chipset, one character at a time. The chips run off-the-shelf operating systems like VxWorks and Linx, a scaled-down version of the Linux operating system designed for embedded devices.? Reprogramming the chip was relatively easy, he said ??and now that the concept has been proven, he thinks others could reproduce his work in a day or two.?

"In fact, it's almost impossible to think that someone else hasn't already done this," he said.

Fixing the flaw will not be easy, Stolfo said.? There is no natural path to update printer operating system software, as there is for desktop PC software.? It's possible a consortium of firms could "push out a fix," once one is available, he said. He urged HP to work with companies like Microsoft to help consumers update their printers.?(Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

One particularly vexing part of the fix: Printers that are already compromised by rogue software likely cannot be fixed. An attacker could easily shut down the pathway for future updates that would ?cure? an infected printer.

?If and when HP rolls out a fix, if a printer is already compromised, the fix would be completely ineffective.? Once you own the firmware, you own it forever. That?s why this problem is so serious, and so different,? Cui said. ?This is nothing like fixing a virus on your PC.?

Such inability to help consumers manually secure their printers could ultimately have disastrous consequences, Stolfo said.

??It may ultimately lead to telling everyone they just have to throw their printers out and start over,? he said. "Fixing this is going to require a very coordinated effort by the industry," Stolfo said.

Rogue software
Hypponen said that the anti-virus industry could develop software tools that would detect booby-trapped print jobs in word processing documents or emails, and thwart attempts to update printers with rogue software that way. But such an approach would hardly be foolproof.

The Columbia researchers are just beginning to sample printers sold by other manufacturers; the research is inconclusive so far, but Stolfo and Cui believe the problem is not limited to Hewlett-Packard machines.

??I think it is very wise to broadcast the problem as soon as possible so all of the printer manufacturers start looking at their security architectures more seriously,? Stolfo said. ??It is conceivable that all printers are vulnerable. ?Printers that are 3-, 4-, 5-years-old and older, I?d think, all used unsigned software. The question is, ?How many of those printers are out there?? It could be much more than 100 million.?

That?s why Stolfo and Cui decided to go public with the vulnerability: They believe the sheer scope of the flaw requires immediate attention and cooperation from multiple elements of the tech industry. The two are currently helping HP devise a mitigation strategy.

HP continues to research the potential flaw, but it?s too early for the firm to announce which products might be impacted, or what consumers should do.

?Until we know things like whether Windows users are affected, whether this is a class or specific product issue, it is frankly irresponsible to say more,? Moore said. ??If this turns out to be the broad (problem) that's being discussed?we will reach out to customers and get it fixed.? We support our customers and value their trust.?

Printers, however, are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to vulnerable embedded devices, Stolfo warned.? Columbia researchers have found that many gadgets now wired to connect to the Internet ? including DVD players, telephone conference tools, even home appliances ? have no security at all.

"Right now, very few people are thinking about the security of all these devices, so we're moving on to look at many more of them,? Stolfo said, noting that supposedly secure offices ? even in sensitive government agencies ? have networked teleconferencing devices, printers, even thermostats that create security risks.

?This is a whole area that is being ignored,? he continued. ?While most folks are focused on applications, there is a comfort level with (embedded systems) that is nonsensical. There's no focus on the security of these devices we take for granted and we carry into secure environments every day.?

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Source: http://redtape.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/29/9076395-exclusive-millions-of-printers-open-to-devastating-hack-attack-researchers-say

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Video: More trouble for Herman Cain

A second chance for faulty food? It's OK with FDA

Moldy applesauce repackaged as canned goods and fruit cups sparked a furor, but it's actually quite common for food processors to turn imperfect, mislabled or contaminated foods, even ice cream, into edible ? and profitable ? goods. The FDA calls it "reconditioning."

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45470111#45470111

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Why Is a CBS News Anchor Scoffing at Blowback and Diplomacy? (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Source: http://www.oleole.com/blogs/kkdas424s-blog/posts/seattle-seahawks-vs-washington-redskins-live-stream-free-nfl-online-tv-on-pc

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Week in iPad for November 27, 2011

Missed a compelling piece of iPad news, a great app review, or a killer how-to? We’re not collecting absolutely everything in iPad here — you can hit up TiPb.com/iPad for that! — but we’re carefully picking what we think is the best of the last 7 days and...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/idcTK04aIaM/story01.htm

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Lebanon PM invites pope to visit, discusses Syria (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Lebanon's prime minister has invited Pope Benedict XVI to visit his country, which the Vatican sees as an important symbol of religious coexistence in the Middle East.

Prime Minister Najib Mikati met with Benedict for about 20 minutes Monday during an overnight visit to Rome that also included talks with the new Italian foreign minister.

The Vatican said the discussions touched on the crisis in Syria and "the need for all parties to commit themselves to peaceful coexistence founded on justice, reconciliation and respect for the dignity of human beings and their inalienable rights."

Members of Mikati's delegation said he extended an invitation to Benedict to visit Lebanon. There was no word from the Vatican, but such a trip has been rumored.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_lebanon

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Galveston County redistricting plan blocked by federal judge (Offthekuff)

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