Tag: some-lingering

Old Uncle Sam seems determined to crack down on botnets, but he still needs a little help figuring out how to do so. On Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security and National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published a request for information, inviting companies from internet and IT companies to contribute their ideas to a voluntary “code of conduct” for ISPs to follow when facing a botnet infestation. The move comes as an apparent response to a June “Green Paper” on cybersecurity, in which the Department of Commerce’s Internet Policy Task Force called for a unified code of best practices to help ISPs navigate through particularly treacherous waters. At this point, the NIST is still open to suggestions from the public, though Ars Technica reports that it’s giving special consideration to two models adopted overseas. Australia’s iCode program, for example, calls for providers to reroute requests from shady-looking systems to a site devoted to malware removal. The agency is also taking a hard look at an initiative (diagrammed above) from Japan‘s Cyber Clean Center, which has installed so-called “honeypot” devices at various ISPs, allowing them to easily detect and source any attacks, while automatically notifying their customers via e-mail. There are, however, some lingering concerns, as the NIST would need to find funding for its forthcoming initiative, whether it comes from the public sector, corporations or some sort of public-private partnership. Plus, some are worried that anti-botnet programs may inadvertently reveal consumers’ personal information, while others are openly wondering whether OS-makers should be involved, as well. The code’s public comment period will end on November 4th, but you can find more information at the source link, below.

US government to beat back botnets with a cybersecurity code of conduct originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 14:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A communique from a “Customer Appeals Manager” at AT&T in response to a Better Business Bureau complaint regarding slow uploads on the Atrix 4G has surfaced over on xda-developers, and it looks to more or less confirm what we’ve suspected: the hardware’s totally capable of pushing HSUPA speeds, it’s just being held back for the moment. The rep says that the carrier’s currently “performing the testing and preparations necessary to ensure that, when [they] turn this feature on, you will continue to have a world class experience,” which would suggest that there might be some lingering network concerns. AT&T’s in the midst of a backhaul upgrade as part of its HSPA+ based “4G” network, so it might merely be a matter of waiting for that to go through before flipping the switch.

[Thanks, Shift3r]

AT&T says it’s testing HSUPA on Atrix 4G, will turn it on eventually originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Mar 2011 17:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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