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Posts Tagged ‘yahoo’

Yahoo Adds Video to Flickr

Posted by mylow on April 9, 2008

Yahoo has added support for video to its photo sharing site Flickr.

Yahoo wants users to start sharing videos, shot by still cameras, camcorders and camera phones, as well as photos, and Video on Flickr provides an easy solution for consumers, according to the company.

Video can be up to 90 seconds long, and no more than 150M bytes in size. To upload video you have to be a Flickr Pro user, but everyone can watch.

Users can upload videos directly from mobile phones, and integrate videos and photos into a stream.

There is also an API for third-party developers to create programs or services using authorized video submitted to Flickr.

Whether it will be able to compete with Youtube remains to be seen, but Yahoo thinks there is a huge untapped market of which it can take advantage.

More than 40 percent of consumers between 18 and 44 are capturing personal video clips with their digital cameras, but they are not taking advantage of Web sites to effectively share their videos.

Fifty-five percent of respondents to a survey commissioned by Yahoo said they merely play back video clips for their friends on their camera device or PC, and 20 percent don’t share these clips at all.

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Yahoo India Intros Maps in Local Languages

Posted by mylow on April 4, 2008

Yahoo! India introduced a new service for the first time in India – maps in local Indian languages and walking directions.

The service is available now available in 9 local languages, Hindi, Tamil, Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam and Punjabi and can be accessed from Yahoo! India maps.

After recently introducing driving directions, Yahoo! India is also offering the option of walking directions. Users can walk to their destinations with a walking route. These directions can be sent to a mobile phone as an SMS. There is also an option to pan and zoom to any point on the map, save it as an image and share it with others.

If a user is visiting a city for the first time and is aware of one prominent landmark, it is still possible to reach the desired destination by using walking directions. Besides providing key landmarks along the route (ATMs, hospitals, etc.), walking directions also provide clarity on every major turn.

Yahoo! India users can search for directions across 179 cities, 4,767 towns, and 226,114 villages. Users can also search for over 3 million points of interest already marked by Internet users from around the web.

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Sharp Launches Mobile Phone for Bloggers

Posted by mylow on March 29, 2008

Sharp has launched a new mobile phone in Japan that features a small QWERTY keyboard and a tool allowing users to easily update their blogs.

The Sharp 922SH went on sale on Thursday and has a 3.5-inch display that folds out to the side so the phone can be used more like a miniature laptop than a traditional clamshell phone. The widescreen VGA display has a resolution of 854 pixel by 480 pixels.

The phone has an RSS reader and a PC-style web browser in addition to one more adapted to mobile use.

There’s a three-row QWERTY keyboard above which sit hot keys for functions such as digital mobile TV and the camera. There are also buttons for phone functions, navigation keys and a shortcut key to Yahoo Mobile, the mobile internet service offered by Softbank, which is the largest shareholder in Yahoo Japan.

The phone works on the WCDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) used in Japan and the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) networks found elsewhere. Its features include Bluetooth and a 2MP main camera and 110,000-pixel sub-camera for videoconferencing. It accepts Micro SD memory cards.

The phone measures 56mm by 116mm by 17mm and weighs 132g. Battery life is 250 minutes of talk time on WCDMA and 270 minutes on GSM with standby time at 340 hours and 310 hours respectively, said Sharp. TV viewing time is 4.5 hours.

The phone is locked to the Softbank network in Japan and there are no plans at present to launch it overseas.

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Google Search Behind Most Phishing Sites

Posted by mylow on March 29, 2008

Three-quarters of phishing sites are built on hacked servers that have been tracked down using pre-programmed Google search terms, according to research from brand-protection firm MarkMonitor.

Among other activities, MarkMonitor tracks phishing attacks that target brand names.

Researchers compiled a list of 750 Google search terms that are used to track down websites likely to have easily exploitable vulnerabilities – mostly PHP-based sites.

The search terms return a list of sites likely to have particular vulnerabilities; the attackers then exploit the vulnerability, gain access to the site, and then use it to host malicious code or counterfeit web pages as part of the scam.

MarkMonitor found that 75 percent of the phishing sites it had discovered had been originally tracked down using one of the list of 750 Google search terms. The finding was based on a sample of one-quarter of the phishing sites logged by the firm.

The search terms, called “Google dorks”, are actively traded on internet forums, and are routinely scanned by IRC-based “bots”, which also scan Yahoo and AOL Search results, according to MarkMontitor.

Google has already made moves to block automated exploitation of the “dorks”, but they can still be used manually.

The websites exploited tend to be small, local PHP-based sites, which are less likely to have the latest patches installed, and are invaded via one of more than 1,800 known PHP bugs, MarkMonitor said.

In the fourth quarter of 2007, 412 organizations were targeted by phishing attacks, up 37 percent from the same period in 2006, according to the firm’s Brandjacking Index, published last month.

Auction sites were the biggest targets, accounting for 44 percent of the phishing emails in the fourth quarter, up from 36 percent in the first quarter of 2007.

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Microsoft Offers Way to Share Data With Social Networks

Posted by mylow on March 26, 2008

Microsoft is opening up its Windows Live platform to allow users to share their contact lists with five social-networking sites, some of which until now have been accessing such data through the back door.

The move is intended to give users control of their data, and remove the need for the kind of work-around used to share such data today, “which unduly puts customers at risk for phishing attacks, identity fraud, and spam,” wrote John Richards, director of Microsoft’s Windows Live Platform, on the official developers’ blog for the platform.

Facebook and Bebo members can now invite friends on their Windows Live contacts list to join their online social network at those sites, without having to hand over their Windows Live password. Members of the Hi5, LinkedIn and Tagged communities will be able to do so “in the coming months,” Microsoft said.

As part of this effort, Microsoft is introducing a new website, www.invite2messenger.net, where people can invite their contacts from any of these five social networks to join them on Windows Live Messenger.

Yahoo already operates a similar service with LinkedIn: a page on the LinkedIn site takes members wishing to import their Yahoo Mail contacts list to a Yahoo log-in page in order to authorize the data exchange.

Some social-networking sites already offer to help their members import their contacts list from Web-based e-mail services and send invitations to people on that list — but to do this, the sites typically ask their members to hand over the username and password for their Web-mail account to gain access to the contact data.

That’s the case, for example, with LinkedIn’s functions for importing contacts lists from Google’s Gmail and AOL’s Web-mail service, which require that members trust LinkedIn with their username and password for the other services. LinkedIn does not yet have a link with Windows Live.

Internet users are becoming increasingly suspicious of such requests for credentials, given the prevalence of phishing attacks and other attempts at identity theft.

To enable the exchange of contacts data, Microsoft has created a new API (application programming interface) that allows social-networking sites to request access to the Windows Live contacts list of their members by sending the members to a Microsoft-controlled log-in page, where the members can enter their Windows Live credentials without having to divulge them to a third party. Microsoft then notes that the user has granted permission to the social-networking site to access the contact data.

Opening up the interfaces is a way of acknowledging that ownership of contacts lists rests with the sites’ users, not with their operators, according to Richards at Microsoft.

“We firmly believe that we are simply stewards of customers’ data and that customers should be able to choose how they control and share their data,” he wrote.

As recently as January, Facebook was not so sure that ownership of contacts lists rested with the users that had supplied it: it disabled, and later reinstated, the Facebook account of a tech blogger who used a service provided by AOL subsidiary Plaxo to download contact data from the Facebook site.

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