Oracle: 11g Xpress Edition 'a year or two' away

It may be "a year or two" before Oracle releases a no-cost Express Edition (XE) of its 11g database, according to Andrew Mendelsohn, the company's senior vice president of database server technologies. Oracle took the same approach with the current 10g Express Edition, according to Mendelsohn, who oversees database development at the vendor. That's because Oracle is going to wait until after the first patch set ships for 11g Release 2, which was launched in July, Mendelsohn said in a brief interview following a speech at Oracle's OpenWorld conference in San Francisco on Monday.

Developers and ISVs (independent software vendors) prize XE because it includes many core features, and allows them to prototype, deploy and distribute applications without any licensing costs. Users with greater needs would need to upgrade to a paid database version such as Standard Edition. However, XE is limited to 4GB of user data, 1GB of memory and a single CPU, and is available on only 32-bit Windows or Linux systems. Some Oracle database administrators believe there is a deliberate reason for the protracted rollout. "It's an approach that ensures that adoption is nil," said Paul Vallée, founder of the Pythian Group, a database management outsourcing company in Ontario, Canada. "I don't think they're interested in adoption. ... I think they have to have it out there just for maybe a check box, just to maybe say they have a free edition." IBM and Microsoft also offer certain versions of databases at no cost. Oracle is attempting to buy Sun Microsystems for US$7.4 billion, but the deal is on hold while European officials conduct an antitrust review.

Oracle simply isn't "gunning for market share in the free database segment," Vallée added. "If they were, the strategy would be to release this exactly the way it is and then sell support and commit to patch sets for it." That is essentially the model Sun Microsystems has used for the open-source MySQL database. Instead, Oracle wants lower-end customers to use a paid version of the database, such as Standard Edition One, said Pythian Group CTO Alexander Gorbachev. It's unclear how the arrival of MySQL will affect XE, or any other aspect of Oracle's database strategy, Vallée said. A Standard Edition One processor license costs $5,800, according to Oracle's latest price list. Oracle plans to increase investment in MySQL, CEO Larry Ellison said during a keynote Sunday.

Gmail, Yahoo Mail join Hotmail; passwords exposed

Google's Gmail and Yahoo's Mail were also targeted by a large-scale phishing attack, perhaps the same one that harvested at least 10,000 passwords from Microsoft's Windows Live Hotmail, according to a report by the BBC. Microsoft , for its part, said late yesterday that it had blocked all hijacked Hotmail accounts, and offered tools to help users who had lost control of their e-mail. The BBC also said it has seen a list of some 20,000 hijacked e-mail accounts; the list included accounts from Gmail, Yahoo Mail, AOL, Comcast and EarthLink. Gmail was the target of what Google called a large-scale phishing campaign, the company told the BBC . "We recently became aware of an industry-wide phishing scheme through which hackers gained user credentials for Web-based mail accounts including Gmail accounts," a Google spokesperson told the news network. The latter two are major U.S. Internet service providers. "As soon as we learned of the attack, we forced password resets on the affected accounts," the Google spokesperson also told the BBC. "We will continue to force password resets on additional accounts when we become aware of them." Neither Google's or Yahoo's U.S. representatives responded to e-mails from Computerworld seeking confirmation that their Gmail and Yahoo Mail services were targeted by phishers, or answers to questions about how many accounts had been compromised and what the firms are doing to help users.

Late Monday, Microsoft said it was blocking access to all the accounts whose details had been posted on the Web last week. "We are taking measures to block access to all of the accounts that were exposed and have resources in place to help those users reclaim their accounts," the company said on its Windows Live blog . Microsoft posted an online form where users who have been locked out of their accounts can verify their identity and reclaim control, and also pointed users to a support page from October 2008 that spells out steps users can take if they think their accounts have been hijacked. Neowin.net, the site that first reported the Hotmail account hijacking early Monday, today added that it had seen the same list of compromised accounts as the BBC. "Neowin can today reveal that more lists are circulating with genuine account information and that over 20,000 accounts have now been compromised," said the Windows enthusiast site . "[The] new list contains e-mail accounts for Gmail, Yahoo, Comcast, EarthLink and other third-party popular Web mail services." Microsoft has acknowledged that log-on credentials for "several thousand" Hotmail accounts had been obtained by criminals, probably through a phishing attack that had duped users into divulging their usernames and passwords. After a slump earlier this year, phishing attacks are on the upswing, according to the Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG). Its most recent data - for the first half of 2009 ( download PDF ) - noted that the number of unique phishing-oriented Web sites had surged to nearly 50,000 in June, the largest number since April 2007 and the second-highest total since the industry association started keeping records. Yesterday, Dave Jevans, the chairman of APWG, called the Hotmail phishing attack one of the largest ever, but cautioned that the usernames and passwords may have been harvested over several months, and not by a single, defined attack.

McCain Moves to Block FCC Net Neutrality

The FCC voted unanimously yesterday to move forward with the debate in an effort to formalize net neutrality guidelines. In the wake of FCC chairman Julius Genachowski's initial announcement of his intent to pursue formal net neutrality rules, a group of GOP lawmakers already initiated a similar attempt. Senator John McCain followed up by introducing a bill that would prohibit the FCC from governing communications. However, that amendment was retracted almost as quickly as it was filed.

Basically, those in power or those who pay more will have better access. McCain's bill, the Internet Freedom Act, seeks to do the opposite of what its name implies by ensuring that broadband and wireless providers can discriminate and throttle certain traffic while giving preferential treatment to other traffic. Apparently we have different definitions of 'freedom'. According to the text of the McCain bill, the FCC "shall not propose, promulgate, or issue any regulations regarding the Internet or IP-enabled services." Isn't that what the FCC does? Oddly, the bill also contains text stating that any regulations in effect on the day before the Internet Freedom Act is officially enacted are grandfathered in and exempt from the provisions of the Internet Freedom Act. Isn't that sort of like introducing a bill to prohibit the Treasury from printing money, or a bill to prohibit the IRS from collecting taxes? The implication seems to be that if the FCC can formalize net neutrality rules before McCain can get the Internet Freedom Act signed into law, the net neutrality rules would still apply.

However, Comcast tried to throttle peer-to-peer networking traffic and only changed policy after the threat of FCC net neutrality rules. Net neutrality opponents claim that the free market can police itself and that any net neutrality restrictions will stifle innovation and competition. AT&T sought to block customers from using VoIP services from its wireless network, but changed policy out of fear of the net neutrality rules. What the FCC voted on yesterday is simply to start the debate. The trend seems to be that these providers only do the 'right thing' when the net neutrality gun is pointing at their head. Its an open discussion, so what are net neutrality opponents afraid of?

If there are valid issues that need to be resolved, then go ahead and bring them to the table. They have 120 days to gather information and collect data and present their case. Don't initiate legislation that seeks to pretend the table doesn't exist. While Obama was attached surgically to his CrackBerry and his staff leveraged social media from their Macbooks, McCain admitted having little or no knowledge or interest in modern technologies like email or the Internet. During the Presidential election campaign last year the differences between the two candidates was stark.

It seems suspicious that the Internet is suddenly a major concern for him. Tony Bradley is an information security and unified communications expert with more than a decade of enterprise IT experience. Maybe he just missed seeing his name in the paper. He tweets as @PCSecurityNews and provides tips, advice and reviews on information security and unified communications technologies on his site at tonybradley.com.

GAO: Los Alamos National Lab's cybersecurity lacking

Cybersecurity efforts to protect a leading U.S. nuclear laboratory's classified computer network remain lacking even after a series of security lapses, according to a new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. The lab has vulnerabilities in several "critical" areas, including identifying and authenticating users, authorizing user access, encrypting classified information and maintaining secure software configurations, the GAO report said. "A key reason for the information security weaknesses GAO identified was that the laboratory had not fully implemented an information security program to ensure that controls were effectively established and maintained," the report said. The Los Alamos National Laboratory, which has suffered multiple security breaches in recent years, continues to have "significant weaknesses ... in protecting the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information stored on and transmitted over its classified computer network," the GAO said in a report released Friday. The lab has not conducted comprehensive risk assessments to ensure against unauthorized use, has not marked the classification level of information stored on its classified network, and has inadequate training for users with security responsibilities, the GAO report said.

Later reports said as many as 67 computers were missing from the lab. In January, there were reports of the theft of three computers from a lab employee's home in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In July 2007, the U.S. Department of Energy moved to fine the lab for an October 2006 breach that exposed classified data. Also in mid-2007, U.S. lawmakers criticized the lab after reports that several officials there had used unprotected e-mail networks to share highly classified information. A contract worker illegally downloaded and removed hundreds of pages of data from the lab using USB thumb drives.

There were other security problems at the lab, including instances in 2003 and 2004 when the lab could not account for classified removable electronic media, such as compact discs and removable hard drives. The DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), while it said it generally agreed with the report, said the lab has made progress in its cybersecurity efforts. A lab spokesman did not immediately return an e-mail seeking comment on the GAO report. Many of the shortcomings have been addressed, said Michael Kane, associate administrator for the NNSA, in a letter to the GAO. In response to a DOE compliance order issued in 2007, "a number of key technical issues and policy implementation concerns have been or are currently being addressed," Kane said. The lab is jointly operated by several groups, including NNSA and the University of California.

The DOE oversees the lab, a multidisciplinary research institution working on strategic science on behalf of U.S. national security.

US relationship with ICANN may not end

A longtime agreement in which the U.S. Department of Commerce has oversight of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is due to expire Wednesday, but that may not be the end of the relationship. This new type of agreement would allow ICANN to become more independent, while addressing concerns from several other countries that the U.S. has too much control over ICANN, said Michael Palage, a former ICANN board member. While ICANN isn't talking, some observers expect a new type of agreement to be announced as soon as Wednesday, with the U.S. government sharing oversight of the nonprofit organization that controls the Internet's domain name system with other countries. The new agreement would create several oversight boards, with international representation, Palage said.

What it's also doing is ... it's putting in some accountability mechanisms." Palage hasn't heard all the details about the new agreement, including how people will be appointed to the new oversight panels. The Economist reported last week that a new agreement, called an affirmation of commitments, will replace the existing pact between the U.S. government and ICANN. The Department of Commerce and ICANN have operated under a series of agreements laying out expectations for the nonprofit since November 1998. The new agreement "will tell them what it should do, but it can't legally bind them," much like past agreements, said Palage, now a senior fellow at the Progress and Freedom Foundation, a conservative think tank. "It gives the appearance in the global community that the U.S. government has recognized that ICANN has done what is was supposed to do. He's also concerned about whether private entities will have the same representation as governments. Many critics of ICANN have complained in recent years that the organization has moved forward with plans to expand services without widespread agreement. While not perfect, the new agreement being talked about would be an improvement over the existing agreement, he said. "Now while the devil will be in the detail, the only concern I have is that the private sector be on equal footing with the public sector in being able to hold ICANN accountable," he said. "If ICANN is to remain a public-private partnership that is founded on the principles of openness, transparency, inclusiveness, accountability and bottom-up coordination, then both the private and public sectors should have equal confidence in the accountability mechanism available to them." Under the latest agreement between the Department of Commerce and ICANN, the nonprofit reaffirmed its commitment to maintaining the security and stability of the domain name system, or DNS. ICANN also promised to stick to the principles of competition, bottom-up coordination and representation.

In particular, ICANN's board in June 2008 voted to allow an unlimited number of new generic top-level domains, such as .food or .basketball, but trademark owners have complained that new gTLDs would force them to register many new Web sites to protect their brands. Asked this week about what happens after the current agreement expires, an ICANN spokeswoman said the Department of Commerce has asked ICANN officials not to comment until Wednesday. Last week, several members of a U.S. Congress subcommittee urged ICANN to back off the gTLD plan until concerns could be resolved. A representative of Viviane Reding, the European commissioner in charge of the information society and the telecom industry, also declined to comment until "the situation in the U.S. has been officially confirmed." Reding has called for more international oversight of ICANN. But Steve DelBianco, executive director of NetChoice, an e-commerce trade group, said he expects a "new formal review process looking at security, consumer trust, and the interests of global Internet users." DelBianco expects that government and private stakeholders will be represented in the new review process, he said. "Prodded by public comments and encouragement from Congress, I'd expect to see a new arrangement that delivers what the global Internet community has wanted: an independent ICANN that preserves private-sector leadership with increased accountability to its core mission," he said. "The tricky part is how to give governments a well-defined role while preserving ICANN's private-sector orientation." An important part of the oversight going forward will likely be on cybersecurity, added DelBianco, a critic of ICANN's gTLD plan. "I'd expect to see explicit accountability for ICANN to make sure the DNS stays up 24-7 and around the world, even as we see increased cyber attacks and a significant expansion of top-level domains," he said. Heather Greenfield, a spokeswoman for the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA), said the trade group expects the U.S. government to stay involved in ICANN. CCIA has also heard that oversight panels, involving the international community, will provide ICANN oversight going forward, she said. "We expect ICANN will retain some type of long-term relationship with the United States, while expanding the involvement of other countries," she added. "Ahead of this agreement ending, ICANN has been making a real effort to respond to past criticism about not being transparent enough."

Steganography meets VoIP in hacker world

Researchers and hackers are developing tools to execute a new data-leak threat: sneaking proprietary information out of networks by hiding it within VoIP traffic. (A brief history of steganography) Techniques that fall under the category of VoIP steganography have been discussed in academic circles for a few years, but now more chatter is coming from the hacker community about creating easy-to-use tools, says Chet Hosmer, co-founder and Chief Scientist at WetStone Technologies, which researches cybercrime technology and trains security professionals investigating cybercrimes. "There are no mass-market programs yet, but it's on our radar, and we are concerned about it given the ubiquitous nature of VoIP," he says. Steganography in general is hiding messages so no one even suspects they are there, and when done digitally, it calls for hiding messages within apparently legitimate traffic. VoIP steganography conceals secret messages within VoIP streams without severely degrading the quality of calls. For example, secret data can be transferred within .jpg files by using the least significant bits to carry it.

There are more than 1,000 steganographic programs available for download online that can place secret data within image, sound and text files, Hosmer says, and then extract it. Because only the least significant bits are used, the hidden messages have little impact on the appearance of the images the files contain. There are none for VoIP steganography yet, but in the labs, researchers have come up with three basic ways to carry it out. The second is hiding data inside each voice payload packet but not so much that it degrades the quality of the sound. The first calls for using unused bits within UDP or RTP protocols – both used for VoIP - for carrying the secret message. The third method calls for inserting extra and deliberately malformed packets within the VoIP flow.

A variation calls for dropping in packets that are so out of sequence that the receiving device drops them. They will be dropped by the receiving phone, but can be picked up by other devices on the network that have access to the entire VoIP stream. These techniques require compromised devices or conspirators on both ends of calls or a man-in-the-middle to inject extra packets. "It's much more difficult to do and much more difficult to detect," than hiding data within other files, Hosmer says. For example, x86 executables can carry secret messages, according to Christian Collberg, an associate professor of computer science at the University of Arizona and co-author of the book Surreptitious Software. The medium used to carry secret messages is called the carrier, and just about anything can be a carrier. By manipulating the compiler, it can be made to choose one addition operation over another, and that choice can represent a bit in the secret message, Collberg says. "There are lots of choices a compiler makes, and whenever you have a choice, that could represent a bit of information," he says.

One of the newest methods takes advantage of TCP retransmission – known as retransmission steganograpny (RSTEG) - in which sending machines resend packets for which they fail to receive acknowledgements. Even something as broadly used as TCP/IP can be host to steganographic messages. The sending and receiving machines must both be in on the steganography, according to a paper written by a group of Polish researchers headed up by Wojciech Mazurczynk at the Warsaw University of Technology. The resent packet is actually different from the initial packet and contains a steganographic message as the payload. At some point during the transmission of a file, the receiving machine fails to send an acknowledgement for a packet and it is resent.

The receiving machine can distinguish such resent packets and opens up the message, the researchers say. In general, defending against steganography is tough to do because traditional security devices such as firewalls and application firewalls don't detect this type of illicit transfer; a file containing a secret message looks just like a legitimate file. In his blog Crypto-Gram Newsletter, security expert Bruce Schneier dismisses the threat from RSTEG. "I don't think these sorts of things have any large-scale applications," he says, "but they are clever." Mazurczynk and his colleagues have spent a lot of time figuring out new carriers for secret messages, publishing research on embedding them in VoIP and wireless LAN traffic. The best way to combat suspected use of steganography to leak corporate data is to look for the telltale signs - known steganography programs on company computers, says Hosmer. When the steganography program is known, it can be applied to the carrier to reveal the secret message.

On systems where it is found, forensic analysis may reveal files that contained messages and an indication of what data might have been leaked. That message may be in code and have to be decrypted, he says. They can confront the person and take steps to prevent further leaks, Collberg says. In many cases, just knowing that steganography is going on and who is responsible is enough for a business. But businesses can take more active steps such as destroying the secret messages by altering the carrier file. Free programs such as Stirmark for scrambling files enough to destroy steganographic messages are available online.

For instance, if the carrier is an image file, setting all the least significant bits to zero would destroy any messages contained there without significantly changing the appearance of the image, he says. Keith Bertolino, founder of digital forensics start-up E.R. Forensics, based in West Nyack, N.Y., has developed double stegging – inserting stenographic messages within files with the intent of disrupting other stenographic messages that might also be in the files. According to Hosmer, a look at evidence in closed cases of electronic crime found that in 3% of those cases, criminals had steganographic programs installed on their computers. "The fact that these criminals were even aware [of steganography] was a startling surprise to law enforcement agencies," he says. He is waiting to find out if he gets a Small Business Innovation and research (SBIR) grant from the government to pursue turning his steganography jamming technology into a commercial product. Interest in steganography is growing, according to Wetstone Technology's monitoring of six popular steganography applications. That's not a dramatic increase given that the use of Internet-connected computes has gone up in the meantime, but it is still noteworthy, he says.

In 2008, the six combined logged 30,000 downloads per month, up from 8,000 to 10,000 per month about three years ago, Hosmer says. Steganography is not always bad. The watermark is a secret message embedded, for instance, in an image file so if the image is use online, a Web crawler can find it. Technically, steganography is just the same as digital watermarking, but with different intent, Collberg says. Then the creator of the image can check whether the site displaying the image has paid for it or is violating copyright, he says.

Exchange 2010 hits RTM

Microsoft Thursday concluded development on Exchange 2010 and said the new mail server would ship on Nov. 9 at the company's TechEd Conference in Berlin, Germany. In addition, the server is being touted as a hybrid - equally at home as the foundation for a hosted e-mail service or a corporate messaging infrastructure. Exchange alternatives Microsoft Exchange 2010 holds challenges, rewards for IT executives Exchange 2010, which is a 64-bit only server, includes new storage and deployment options, enhanced in-box management capabilities, built-in e-mail archiving, new database clustering, additional hardware options, and a revamped Outlook Web Access client.

The hosted version of Exchange 2010, however, is not expected to ship until May or June 2010. Microsoft already hosts more than 5 million users on Exchange 2010 as part of its Live@Edu program. The company said that the ability to use Exchange as a hosting platform is now built into the product. And end-users are already planning corporate rollouts, including Ford Motor Co. with plans to deploy 100,000 seats.  "Our senior leadership team has signed off on the final code, and it has been sent to our early adopters for one final look before its public release," read a blog post signed by "The Exchange Team". Microsoft has said previously that it has specially architected Exchange 2010 for high-availability and cross-domain integration using techniques such as pairing the server with Windows Server 2008 clustering technology and directory federation features. Lee Dumas, the director of architecture for Azaleos, a provider of remote management services for Exchange and SharePoint, says 2010 has challenges and rewards. "I'm not slamming Exchange, but to achieve the level of [service-level agreements], and dealing with large amounts of data, multiple copies of databases, server roles, and load balancing makes complexity inherent in getting the whole system in place," he says. Network World Lab Alliance member Joel Snyder said in his Exchange 2010 review that corporate users should carefully assess the implications of the new server. "The combination of clustering, replication and low-cost disk support means that reliability and scalability can be based on replicating small, inexpensive servers both within a data center and between data centers.

The rewards, however, will follow for those that heed due diligence, he says. E-mail managers thinking of deploying Exchange 2010 should step back and evaluate closely these new grid-style architectural approaches - and be sure that your Exchange team has adequate time to re-think and re-evaluate commonly held beliefs on how to build large Exchange networks." Exchange 2010 is the first in a wave of new Office products set to ship this year and next. Office 2010, SharePoint Server 2010, Office Communications Manager 2010, Visio 2010 and Project 2010 are slated to ship in the first half of 2010. Follow John on Twitter.