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What Makes A Good Software Developer?

5/25/2014

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Software development is a constantly growing field, and the ability to program and build custom software is in high demand. For a candidate looking to begin a career in the field of software development, it’s important to make sure that the position is the right fit. Here are a few key questions for aspiring software developers to consider when looking to get started in their careers.

What Makes a Good Software Developer?

While some hiring managers may have different views on what qualities make up the best person for a particular position, when it comes to looking for a good software developer, managers look for one particular quality: Problem-solving. Simply put, software developers are problem-solvers. This is what you’ll hear from both the developers themselves and the managers who hire them.

Hiring managers also stress the importance of the inquisitive mind when evaluating potential candidates for a software developer position. They look for candidates with an analytic mind, curiosity and a passion for learning. Since developers constantly have to stay abreast with the latest technologies, an eagerness to learn and keep up with the most recent trends is key for sustaining a career as a good software developer. Continual learning and a desire to improve one’s skillset are both essential elements that a software developer must possess.

In addition to looking for candidates with a problem-solving and curious mind, hiring managers also identified these other important skills they seek out in software developers: Flexibility, focus on quality, attention to detail and ability to work on a team.

What Should Aspiring Software Developers do to Prepare for their Careers?

Many aspiring developers will enroll in undergraduate college programs in computer since, information systems or other related fields. It’s highly important to take advantage of the educational opportunities available in your college or university. Learning good principles of software design and planning are the best things you can focus on in college. Make sure you don’t skip discrete mathematics – it really helps to have a good understanding of the concepts beneath computer science.

While learning in the classroom is certainly a valuable tool, there are other avenues where developers can improve their skills through other collaborative activities. In the Philadelphia area, for example, there is an event called Code Camp that is put together by the non-profit organization philly.NET. The semi-annual convention has dozens of speakers that talk about a whole range of programming technologies.

Even if you don’t have the ability to attend an event like that, you may not even need to look further than your own school’s computer science department for helpful activities. Some colleges have programming teams or clubs that go and compete against other colleges. Joining one of these teams will give you something close to professional experience and broaden your skillset with things that you don’t learn in class.

It is also important to try to lean a variety of technologies in order to increase your versatility as a developer. As a whole, it is beneficial for aspiring developers to be well-versed in database design, concepts and programming, Web technologies and object-oriented programming. Some of the most prominent languages include SQL, ASP.Net, HTML, and JavaScript.

What Are the Best Ways for Developers to Present Themselves in Interviews?

One of the best ways for an aspiring developer to assert him or herself during an interview is to simply be honest. Hiring managers don’t expect candidates—especially entry level ones—to be familiar with every technology available. Speak to what you know and not try to guess when you don’t understand a technology. Development is an ever evolving environment and it is ok to not always fully understand all aspects of it. Truthfulness during the interview is vital to ensuring that the candidate is indeed right for the position.

Some of the best interviews are conducted with candidates who are more relaxed throughout the process. Try to treat the meeting as more of a conversation and less of an interview. Because managers look for candidates who have a passion for learning, it’s important to make sure that aspect shines through during your conversations. In an interview you’ll be able to show that you’re focused on continual improvement as a developer.

It also wouldn’t hurt to have extra items available during your interview such as a portfolio or a specific project you’ve worked on. These items can help the interviewer gain a better understanding of your knowledge and skills.


Source: http://smallbiztrends.com/2014/05/good-software-developer-best-practices.html?tr=sm
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First physical Google learning space opens in Brazil

5/25/2014

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THE search giant already offers students and teachers a host of virtual tools, from apps to its Hangouts sessions for improving academic attainment via technology, but the new space at the privately-run Colégio Mater Dei school in São Paulo marks a world first.

Kitted out with a sound system, ultra-fast wireless broadband Internet, smart TVs and Chromecasts, Eduardo Gomide describes the space as “A collaborative learning centre where students of all ages come to read, learn and share using technology in a specially designed environment,” and one that is a logical progression.

In a blog post, the CEO of Foreducation — an organisation created to deploy and manage the use of Google technology in the classroom — explains how the space came about as a logical next step: teachers and administrators at the school were already using a host of Google’s products to make their lessons more innovative and inclusive.

He also notes that by bringing apps and interfaces into the classroom that students are not only already familiar with, but also use every day at home, interaction and results have improved.

“The biggest impact of going Google is the new level of enthusiasm students bring to the classroom.

“When students are more engaged, they learn better — our kids have proven that to us. Creating a learning environment in which students are truly engaged with technology distinguishes Mater Dei as what we like to think of as a school of the future,” he writes.



Source: http://www.therakyatpost.com/lifestyle/2014/05/26/first-physical-google-learning-space-opens-brazil/
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New gadget to charge phones twice as fast

5/25/2014

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THE Legion Meter safely ups the flow of power into a handset’s battery and can cut charging times for both Apple and Android devices.

Two separate reports published this month both highlight that the number-one feature that consumers demand from a smartphone isn’t screen size, or even image-taking quality, it’s a long battery life.

Therefore it’s with perfect timing that the Legion Meter has just appeared on Kickstarter.

It can’t eke more juice out of an iPhone or Nexus 5, but what it can do is seriously accelerate recharging.

Plug the phone’s charging cable into one end of the device — which is pretty much the same size as a USB key — and plug the other end into a computer’s USB port or into a power socket via an adaptor, and it will “supercharge” the battery.

Its makers, PLX Devices, claim it can charge a battery up to 92% faster and do so safely. The device even has a small OLED display that will show how the battery is behaving and how much juice it has in real world terms.

What’s more the same device — which will cost US$69 (RM221) when it hits retail before the end of this year — is compatible with both iPhone and Android handsets.

As a sweetener, the company was offering early-bird specials on Kickstarter for US$39 (RM125), but is completely sold out.

What’s more, the gadget has charged past its initial funding target and by some length.

PLX Devices had been looking for US$10,000 (RM32,075) via crowdfunding but has already raised more than US$211,255 (RM677,600) and there are still over 20 days of the campaign remaining.



Source: http://www.therakyatpost.com/lifestyle/2014/05/26/new-gadget-charge-phones-twice-fast/
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Facebook, explained: 4 privacy changes you need to know about

5/24/2014

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Facebook has finally caved to public pressure and agreed to improve its privacy settings, but the tighter security for its traditional features also comes with a new potential concern.

From more safety prompts and user-friendly interfaces, to some big changes for its mobile app, here’s everything you need to know about the changing face of Facebook.

Privacy checkup

What says “privacy” better than a blue dinosaur?

In an effort to address privacy concerns, Facebook introduced a “privacy dinosaur” popup in April to remind users when they’re making a public post. That popup has since been expanded to include a privacy checkup tool, so long-time users can review their sharing settings.

“We want to do all we can to put power and control in people’s hands,” Facebook said in a recent statement on its website. “This new tool is designed to help people make sure they are sharing with just the audience they want. Everything about how privacy works on Facebook remains the same.”

Anonymous login

Are you tired of apps demanding your Facebook information at the login screen? Do you hate it when Candy Crush Saga posts to your wall? On April 30, Facebook rolled out its anonymous login functionality, so users can now connect their Facebook-enabled apps without surrendering their personal information. Now you can play Candy Crush Saga without the game posting updates to your Facebook wall.

Newcomer-friendly

The Facebook interface is pretty busy-looking, and for first-time users, all those settings can be intimidating. It used to be that, if newcomers didn’t change their privacy settings immediately, their posts would be displayed to the public.

“We recognize that it is much worse for someone to accidentally share with everyone when they actually meant to share just with friends, compared with the reverse,” Facebook said.

To fix that and give newcomers more security, Facebook has changed its default privacy settings. Now, new users will be prompted to pick their audience when they make their first post, and the default will be set to share only with friends.

Facebook has faced a lot of heat over privacy concerns lately, so it’s no surprise that many of its recent updates have been targeted to addressed that very issue.

Microphone

Buried under all those privacy upgrade announcements is a new potential concern, as Facebook can now listen to what’s happening around you. The mobile app will soon be able to activate your smartphone microphone so it can hear your environment and determine what you’re doing – if you have the optional feature turned on.

Whether you’re listening to Justin Bieber in the car or watching True Detective on the couch at home, the Shazam-like feature will detect what you’re doing, in hopes that you’ll share those details with your Facebook friends. Facebook is billing the new feature as a way to “share and discover music, TV and movies” without having to type it all out.

And while Facebook says it doesn’t store the actual sound, a spokesperson for the company recently told the International Business Times that the audio data will be collected and aggregated.

That means that while Facebook can’t hear you, it will have records of what you like doing.



Source: http://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/facebook-explained-4-privacy-changes-you-need-to-know-about-1.1837422
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Wearable tech devices going out of fashion?

5/24/2014

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LOS ANGELES, May 25 — The wearables market is riding the crest of a wave at the moment and as many as 48 million devices, from smartwatches and headsets to activity trackers could be snapped up by consumers excited by the hype by the end of this year. However, that wave could be in danger of crashing and wiping out demand as early as 2016, according to a new report.

This is because, according to NPD DisplaySearch, the hype around the gadgets is beginning to fade, and unless prices drop or a wearable launches that becomes an essential tech gadget like a smartphone, smartwatches and smartglasses are in danger of being seen as a fashion fad.

“We expect that the dynamics of the wearables market will be similar to DVD, LCD TV, smartphones, and other digital consumer markets with commoditized hardware,” outlined Paul Gray, director of European TV research for NPD DisplaySearch. “The arrival of Samsung, LGE, and other large, cost-efficient manufacturers to the wearables market would bring prices and margins down.”

However, it is still unclear how the devices are going to develop over time and which ones will and won’t find their consumer niche. And because of this, in its Wearable Device Market and Forecast Report, NPD has outlined three potential future scenarios.

The first, which NPD calls the “Forward into the Past” scenario, sees expensive wearable tech devices appealing to and being snapped up by wealthy early adopters in small numbers. For example, Google Glass has just gone on sale in the US, but with a US$1500 price, making the gadget more expensive than a MacBook Pro notebook and putting it beyond the reach of many consumers.

The people who do snap up the smart headset will reinforce its desirability, but sales won’t increase until prices fall. This takes years and will lead to a noticeable dip in the market while competition is increasing and component prices drop.

The “Incidental to Essential” scenario sees a class of wearables becoming must-have items because of their functionality or because of clever lock-ins -- so access to certain types of apps or services or an ecosystem. NPD compares this scenario to how iTunes went from nothing to all-conquering.

The final scenario, “Persuasive and Pervasive,” is most likely to be powered by devices focused on health. The wearables that are already catching on are those focused on quantifying activity, health and movement, rather than smartphone notifications, and NPD can see a future where this type of product’s usefulness leads to it being recommended by healthcare professionals and becoming popular with consumers in countries where consumers are focused on well-being but access to on-demand healthcare isn’t always straightforward.

For instance, the biggest market currently for fitness-tracking wristbands is the US.

While reports on the wearables market sometimes differ greatly in terms of current and projected shipments from research firm to research firm, one thing they tend to have in common is a focus on Apple.

Unless the company enters the market with a reference-setting product, wearable devices may take a long time to find a niche, a clear use case and to genuinely appeal to customers.

For example, pre-iPhone, there was a need for the features that a smartphone offered, but not in the package they were offered. Apple’s first phone helped consumers make sense of the hype and the buzz. And clearly there are hopes that Apple will ride to the rescue again with an ‘iWatch’ that turns the buzz into something much more easy to comprehend.

Otherwise, according to NPD, the wearables market will peak in 2015 with sales of potentially 91 million devices, then plummet again as fashions change and the hype dissipates. — AFP Relaxnews


Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/tech-gadgets/article/wearable-tech-devices-going-out-of-fashion
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Google brings futuristic Linux software CoreOS onto its cloud

5/23/2014

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Fans of new Linux operating system "CoreOS" can now run the lightweight tech on Google's main cloud service.

This means developers who want a Linux OS that takes up just 168MB of RAM, runs all of its applications within containers, and is designed for marshaling mammoth clusters of computers, can now do so on top of Google's cloud.

"In the next few days, CoreOS will become available as a default image type in the GCE control panel, making running your first CoreOS cluster on GCE an easy, browser-based experience," wroteCoreOS's chief technology officer Brandon Philips in a blog post. "CoreOS is an ideal host for distributed systems and Google Compute Engine is a perfect base for CoreOS clusters."

CoreOS is built around three key technologies: etcd, a distributed key-value store that helps tie clusters of CoreOS machines together; Docker, which is used to package up apps and run them as containers while automatically configuring the network; and Linux mainstay systems, which helps developers command a cluster of CoreOS machines as though they are one system.

The CoreOS team has done some work to integrate the OS with the capabilities of Google's cloud platform, making it easier for developers to pair apps on the lightweight OS with some of the advanced services provided by Google's cloud.

"CoreOS integrates easily with Google load balancers and replica pools to easily scale your applications across regions and zones," Philips explains in a guest Googleblog post. "Using replica groups with CoreOS is easy; configure the project-level metadata to include a discovery URL and add as many machines as you need. CoreOS will automatically cluster new machines and fleet will begin utilizing them. If a single machine requires more specific configuration, additional cloud-config parameters can be specified during boot."

"Running on Compute Engine allows you to connect your front-end and back-end services running on CoreOS to a fully managed Cloud Datastore or Cloud SQL database," he explaines. "Applications that store user-generated content on Google Cloud Storage can easily start worker instances on the CoreOS cluster to process items as they are uploaded."

Since Google's (virtualized) cloud is itself built on top of Linux containerization, this means developers will enter into the paradoxical situation of running a container-based OS on a hypervisor on top of a container. However, Google product manager Navneet Joneja assures El Reg that "virtualization has gotten really good, the performance overhead tends to be minimal. Everything we've heard is [CoreOS] performance is really good on Compute Engine."

Most of the work for this support was done by the CoreOS team, Joneja said, before noting that there's "a good overlap" between CoreOS and the Google Cloud's capabilities and methods of doing things.

From our perspective, it's an intriguing partnership, and highlights that though CoreOS is a young technology it seems to be squinting at a software future that the rest of us can't quite see, yet. ®


Source: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/05/23/google_loads_coreos_onto_its_cloud/
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Project Tango: Google's future Android tablet will capture 3D images

5/23/2014

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Google’s Project Tango has been shaping up quite quickly since we got our first look at the programme. While we are not close to a retail product yet, the latest report from the Wall Street Journal on Tango, suggests the second device would be a small form factor tablet with an advanced 3D imaging camera. Google is reportedly producing 4,000 prototypes of this tablet next month. But what’s so special about a tablet or a software platform that can capture 3D images of objects? That’s just scratching the surface of course; Project Tango is more than just a 3D camera platform. Let’s find out what it’s all about.

What is it?

“What if you could capture the dimensions of your home simply by walking around with your phone before you went furniture shopping? What if directions to a new location didn’t stop at the street address? What if you never again found yourself lost in a new building?”

That’s how Google described Project Tango in its introduction. All of this is possible thanks to 3D depth sensing and motion detection. Project Tango devices can measure depth data, tell how far objects are in a room, if they are moving closer or stationary and how much space they occupy. It does it all in real-time thanks to a custom developed Movidius Myriad 1 vision processor, which is a one-of-its-kind low-powered companion chip, sort of like Apple M7 chipset.

Google’s Advanced Technology and Projects group is the force behind Project Tango, just like the Ara modular phone project. All Project Tango devices at first are believed to have two back cameras along with a bevy of infrared and silent depth sensors.

So how does it work?
The real magic is in software. It’s basically like packing a Kinect into a smartphone (literally). The software allows the cameras to lay a grid of dots on objects and depending on how the dots are placed, the device identifies objects in the room. An iFixit teardown of the first Tango prototype smartphone revealed this about the algorithm behind the software: “The algorithm cross-correlates groups of dots from the captured image of the projected dots with the pattern stored. Since the pattern is pseudo-random, each group of dots will have a unique fingerprint. Depth/distance is then calculated from the deviation in position of each dot in the sub-group related to its position in the stored pattern.”

Seeing objects in a room
Built for Android

Just like Project Ara, Tango is also built for Android phones and tablets. The introduction video clearly shows an Android device as the base. The Project Tango has been available for developers to play around and build apps related to indoor navigation, real world and augmented reality gaming, and new algorithms for processing sensor data. Google will let developers tap in to Project Tango via APIs to let them integrate the hardware and software capabilities into their image-capture apps, games, navigation systems, mapping applications etc. It’s as yet unclear whether Google intends to launch a separate Project Tango app storefront. Since the first development toolkit is already out, app makers already have an idea of what Project Tango is capable of.

The hardware side of things
Who is it for?

Project Tango is all about interacting with real world objects. So its applications range from personal safety, to navigation, to public spaces. For example, combining Project Tango with haptic feedback, you could help visually impaired people navigate a room without any other aid. Or it could be something like your Android phone alerting you on spotting an object in a store which it knows you have searched for in the past. Perhaps you may not want to buy it anymore, but Google wants to nudge you nonetheless.

The biggest advantage that Google has is that it’s building Project Tango for mobile devices, which allows it to tap into pretty much every real-world place, since smartphones travel with their users everywhere, so the possibilities for apps are greatly enhanced, as opposed to a game console or a PC. Google has taken big strides in contextual computing already with software offerings such as Google Now and predictive search. By combining it with computer vision, it can expand the horizons of contextual computing even further, and make it seem more relevant in everyday life.



Source: http://tech.firstpost.com/news-analysis/project-tango-googles-future-android-tablet-will-capture-3d-images-224316.html
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CEO: Sony needed to act sooner, but will reform

5/23/2014

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TOKYO -- Sony Corp. Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai said Thursday the company accumulated huge losses because it didn't respond quickly enough to changing market conditions, but promised a return to profit next year.

Last week, Sony reported a 128.4 billion yen ($1.3 billion) loss for the fiscal year ended March. It is forecasting a 50 billion yen ($490 million) loss for the current fiscal year. Sony has repeatedly disappointed investors by not achieving its profit forecasts.

"We must acknowledge that out steps to take action had come much too slowly," he told reporters at the Japanese entertainment and electronics giant's Tokyo headquarters. "We are going to fully complete our structural reforms."

Hirai's vision of Sony's turnaround centers on key technologies such as image sensors, cloud-based services and wearable devices.

He stressed that although Sony's electronics business was ailing, it was doing well in other areas such as finance, which includes a bank and insurance services, and entertainment, which boasts a successful "Spider-Man" film franchise and the PlayStation 4 video game machine.

He denied the company will sell or pull the plug on its money-losing TV business. Once a leader in TVs, Sony has lost out to competitors such as South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. which led in the shift to flat panels.


Sony's TV operations have been struggling for a decade, fueling speculation Sony might exit the business entirely.

Hirai, however, said he was banking on 4K TVs, which deliver better image quality than current high-definition digital TVs.

Still, scaling back on areas where a company is suffering is often part of its turnaround plan.

Earlier this year, Sony said it was selling its Vaio personal computer business. Restructuring charges, dealing with inventory and other costs related to that sale is weighing on Sony's results this fiscal year.

Hirai said no more major job cuts or other sales were in the pipeline this fiscal year. What remains to be done is seeing through with the plans calling for a leaner Sony, instead of backpedaling as it had done in the past, he said.


When asked whether he will resign to take responsibility for the red ink, Hirai said he sees his main job as getting the reforms done, so that Sony doesn't have another year of losses.

"My challenge is to see this through, and that's the best way to respond to everyone's expectations," he said.

One change for Sony will be that it will stop reaching for market share and will instead focus on solid profitability, said Hirai.

Hirai became the head of Sony two years ago, when it was in even deeper trouble, racking up the worst losses in the company's history.

Hirai and other Sony executives reminded the crowd that Sony's past success rested on its strong engineering to deliver innovative products that helped define a consumer lifestyle.

"That Sony spirit remains part of our unchanging DNA," Hirai said. "But we must not be afraid to change what needs to be changed."


Source: http://www.philstar.com/science-and-technology/2014/05/24/1326794/ceo-sony-needed-act-sooner-will-reform

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Facebook knows what you're watching & listening to

5/23/2014

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Facebook's phone app will soon be able to listen in to your music and TV shows - and identify them, in a new Shazam-like feature aimed at hoovering up even more of your personal data.

Log on to Facebook these days and you're likely to see a lot of adverbs in addition to your friends' status updates.

Maybe someone is "feeling meh", or "drinking coffee"; maybe they're even "travelling to Spain" and making you "feel jealous". Since a new feature was added allowing users to choose options describing their current status, five billion people have made use of it.

In Facebook's latest update for Android or iOS apps, the current "listening to" option will be expanded further, allowing Facebook to automatically detect your music or TV choice (in the US) through having automatic access to your microphone.

Users of the unrelated Shazam app have been able to do this for some time. The difference is that Facebook users will be asked if they want to share it when they go to update their status. The tech giant is keen to point out that you have to opt in to use this feature, which it says can't detect conversation, and the word "optional" is even in the title of the press release.

Sharing will make a 30-second clip of your chosen entertainment feature pop up on your friends' news feed. If it's a TV show, Facebook will add the season and episode, and a hashtag if applicable.

And Facebook is hoping that this will turn users' news feeds into a platform on which to discuss what's on TV in real time. It has sealed deals with 160 US television stations to allow the detection required for this feature.

'Quicker and easier' conversations - and data
Lily Hay Newman has pointed out on Slate that the latest update "doesn't really make sense" from a user's perspective: "how often are you watching a TV show or movie without knowing what it is?" she wrote.

But aside from making you think twice about listening or watching those guilty pleasures, the new feature is another sign of the company's attempts to move into the entertainment arena - and hoover up even more valuable data about its users.

At the moment Twitter and its hashtags are where the TV chat happens. But Facebook's new feature is an attempt to take over the conversation, with the added advantage of an automatic way in through your microphone - with the help of Spotify, Rdio and Deezer APIs to detect the songs. (An API is a computer programme that allows the sharing of data with another website or programme).

"We're making those conversations quicker and easier by introducing a new way to share and discover music, TV and movies," said Facebook's Aryeh Selekman.

Doing so would provide Facebook with hugely valuable information that can be used in targeted advertising - so you are shown adverts of tickets to a live gig of whatever artist you are listening to, for example. TechCrunch reported that data isn't being used in this way at the moment, however Facebook will collate and use information about the number of times a song or TV programme has been tagged to an artist.

Privacy concerns
Even if you decide not to share the info on your news feed, Facebook will still own the data.

The new feature follows an update to the Facebook app in February, which allows the company to access your text messages and your calendar.

In April, Facebook also bought the company behind Moves fitness app, which tracks your location and movement, and its purchase of the WhatsApp messaging service. The latter prompted a warning from the FTC, which urged Facebook not to forget about their obligations to consumer privacy.

Whether the latest update is "creepy", as reported in The Register, a "new weapon in the battle against Twitter," as Techcrunch reported, or worthy of inciting "fear and scepticism", it is yet another sign of Facebook's hold over our every waking moment.


Source: http://www.channel4.com/news/facebook-app-wants-listen-audio-music-tv
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Exclusive: EBay initially believed user data safe after cyberattack

5/22/2014

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(Reuters) - EBay Inc initially believed that its customers' data was safe as forensic investigators reviewed a network security breach discovered in early May and made public this week, a senior executive told Reuters on Friday.

EBay has come under fire over its handling of the cyberattack, in which hackers accessed personal data of all 145 million users, ranking it among the biggest such attacks launched on a corporation to date.

"For a very long period of time we did not believe that there was any eBay customer data compromised," global marketplaces chief Devin Wenig said, in the first comments by a top eBay executive since the e-commerce company disclosed the breach on Wednesday.

EBay moved "swiftly to disclose" the breach after it realized customer data was involved, he said.

Wenig would not say when the company first realized that the cyberattackers accessed customer data, nor how long it took to prepare Wednesday's announcement.

He said hackers got in using the credentials of three corporate employees, eventually making their way to the user database.

Hackers accessed email addresses and encrypted passwords belonging to all eBay users. "Millions" of users have since reset their passwords and the company had begun notifying users, though it would take some time to complete that task, Wenig said.

"You would imagine that anyone who has ever touched eBay is a large number," he said. "So we're going to send all of them an email, but sending that number all at once is not operationally possible."

At least three U.S. states are investigating the company's security practices. Customers have complained on social media about delayed notification emails. And New York's attorney general called on eBay to provide free credit monitoring services to users.

But the Internet retail giant has no plans to compensate customers or offer free credit monitoring for now because it had detected no financial fraud, Wenig said.

Wenig declined comment when asked if he thought eBay had good security prior to the breach. He said the company would now bolster its security systems, and has mobilized senior executives in a subsequent investigation of the attack.

"We want to make sure it doesn't happen again so we're going to continue to look our procedures, harden our operational environment and add levels of security where it's appropriate."

The breach marked the latest headache for eBay this year. In January, it crossed swords publicly with activist investor Carl Icahn, who mounted a campaign to get it to spin out PayPal. Then in April, the e-commerce company disappointed investors with a weak second-quarter outlook, pressuring its shares.

AVOIDING BACK DOORS

Buying and selling activity on eBay remained "fairly normal" though eBay is still working out the cost of the breach, which included hiring a number of security firms. Wenig, who was previously a senior executive at Thomson Reuters Corp, declined to comment on whether the cost could be material to eBay's results.

Wenig's revelation that the company initially believed that no customer data had been compromised might take some of the heat off eBay's executive team.

Cyber forensics experts said it's not uncommon for large companies to take weeks to grasp the full impact of an attack, because hackers are often able to steal data without leaving obvious clues.

"In some cases you go in and find the smoking gun immediately. Other times, it takes a few days or even a few weeks," said Kevin Johnson, a cyber-forensics expert who was not involved in the eBay investigation but has worked for other Fortune 500 companies.

Daniel Clemens, a forensics expert and CEO of Packet Ninjas, said investigators often ask companies to hold off on disclosure until they believe they understand the full extent of an attack. Otherwise, they risk tipping off attackers who might cover their tracks or leave "back doors" so they can return after the investigators complete their probe.

On Wednesday, the e-commerce company announced that hackers raided its network between late February and early March. The company said financial information was not compromised and its payments unit PayPal was not affected.

When eBay first discovered the network breach in early May, the senior team was immediately involved and held multiple daily calls on the issue. EBay staff have been working around the clock since Wednesday.

Wenig said he could not provide much more detail about what happened in the attack beyond the scant information given out so far.

He declined to provide further specifics, citing ongoing investigations by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and several forensics firms including FireEye Inc's Mandiant division.

(Editing by Edwin Chan, Lisa Shumaker and Andrew Hay)



Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/23/us-ebay-cybercrime-idUSBREA4M0PH20140523

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