Thursday, 29 August 2013

Want to impresssomebody with your cooking !!!!
But dont have time to learn one!!!

why dont try on your own phone


with MY COOKBOOKBASICS






SO RUN TO THE KITCHEN !!!!!!!


AIDE- android IDE on android



Hello guys,

So you want to learn android ..... but dont want to sit infront of ur pc..

so i have an idea .....Yes, you can do this on your tablet or andoid phone with AIDE.


Very easy and simple interface .

Here is my example for Hello World







To Run the app






Feel free to ask questions ... willpost the new programs in next post






Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Aware Interface

Struts 2 Aware Interface provide 4 aware interfaces


a. Session Aware
b. Session Context Aware.
c. Servlet Request Aware
d. Servlet ResponseAware.


to access HttpServletRequest,HttpServletResponse ,Servlet Context and HttpSession objects.






Cybercrooks use DDoS attacks to mask theft of banks' millions

Distributed denial of service attacks have been used to divert security personnel attention while millions of dollars were stolen from banks, according to a security researcher.
At least three US banks in recent months have been plundered by fraudulent wire transfers while hackers deployed "low powered" DDoS attacks to mask their theft, Avivah Litan, an analyst at research firm Gartner, told SCMagazine.com. She declined to name the institutions affected but said the attacks appeared unrelated to the wave of DDoS attacks last winter and spring that took down Web sites belonging to JP Morgan Wells FargoBank of America, Chase, Citigroup, HSBC, and others.
"It wasn't the politically motivated groups," she said. "It was a stealth, low-powered DDoS attack, meaning it wasn't something that knocked their website down for hours."
Litan described the attack method in a blog post last week that warned banks' losses could have been much greater.
"Once the DDoS is underway, this attack involves takeover of the payment switch (eg, wire application) itself via a privileged user account that has access to it," she wrote. "Now, instead of having to get into one customer account at a time, the criminals can simply control the master payment switch and move as much money from as many accounts as they can get away with until their actions are noticed."
Litan, an expert in financial fraud and banking security, did not describe how attackers gained access to the wire payment switch at banks, but she offered banks advice on how they might better protect themselves.
"One rule that banks should institute is to slow down the money transfer system while under a DDoS attack," she wrote. "More generally, a layered fraud prevention and security approach is warranted.

China's Internet hit by DDoS attack; sites down for hours

China's Internet was taken down in an attack on Sunday that could have been perpetrated by sophisticated hackers or an individual, security experts say.
According to The Wall Street Journal, which earlier reported on the outage, China on Sunday was hit with what the government has called the biggest distributed denial-of-service attack ever to rock its ".cn" sites. The attack, which lasted up to four hours, according to security company CloudFlare, left many sites with the .cn extension down. According to the Journal, parts of the affected sites were still accessible during the outage, due mainly to site owners storing parts of their pages in cache.
In a statement on the matter, the government-run China Internet Network Information Center confirmed the attack, saying that it was indeed the largest the country has experienced. The center said it is gradually restoring services and will work to improve the top-level domain's security to safeguard against similar attacks.
It's not currently known who attacked the Chinese domain. However, in a statement on the matter, CloudFlare CEO Matthew Prince said that while it's possible a sophisticated group of hackers took .cn down, "it may have well been a single individual."

Syrian Electronic Army implicated in Twitter, New York Times attacks

The hacker group gets administrator privileges for Twitter's domain name record and also appears involved in a New York Times' Web site outage.


The Syrian Electronic Army apparently took control over the Twitter.com Web site address record Tuesday, the hacker group's latest attack on high-profile Internet sites.
The Twitter.com whois record, which lists the owner of the Web address names called domains, listed the owner's e-mail address as sea@sea.sy. The site continued to function, however.
The New York Times' Web site went down on Tuesday afternoon, and the SEA is a suspect there, too. "Our initial assessment is that this is most likely the result of a malicious external attack," the Times said in a statement on Facebook. The Syrian Electronic Army is a suspect: Gawker published a screenshot of the newspaper's site that said, simply, "Hacked by SEA."
In an article, The New York Times said the problem occurred because of an attack on the domain name registrar it uses to keep control over the nytimes.com name.
"The New York Times Web site was unavailable to readers on Tuesday afternoon following an attack on the company's domain name registrar, Melbourne IT. The attack also required employees of The Times to stop sending out sensitive e-mails," the story said. "The Syrian Electronic Army, a hacker collective that supports the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, is believed to have attacked the sites or social media accounts of several prominent media organizations."
tweet by Twitter user Official_SEA16 said, "Hi @Twitter, look at your domain, its owned by #SEA :)" https://twitter.com/Official_SEA16/statuses/372462339456380928
SEA has found Twitter to be a fruitful avenue of attack. In recent months, it's taken over the Twitter feeds of Thomson Reuters, the BBC60 Minutes, and The Associated Press.

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