Monday, February 3, 2020

New ransomware doesn’t just encrypt data. It also meddles with critical infrastructure

Stock photo of energy plant at night.

Enlarge (credit: An Energy Company / Flickr)

Over the past five years, ransomware has emerged as a vexing menace that has shut down factories, hospitals, and local municipalities and school districts around the world. In recent months, researchers have caught ransomware doing something that's potentially more sinister: intentionally tampering with industrial control systems that dams, electric grids, and gas refineries rely on to keep equipment running safely.

A ransomware strain discovered last month and dubbed Ekans contains the usual routines for disabling data backups and mass-encrypting files on infected systems. But researchers at security firm Dragos found something else that has the potential to be more disruptive: code that actively seeks out and forcibly stops applications used in industrial control systems. Before starting file-encryption operations, the ransomware kills processes listed by process name in a hard-coded list within the encoded strings of the malware.

In all, Ekans kills 64 processes, including those spawned by human-machine interfaces from Honeywell, the Proficy Historian from General Electric, and licensing servers from GE Fanuc. The same 64 processes, it turns out, are targeted in a version of the MegaCortex ransomware. That version first came to light in August.

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https://arstechnica.com

Josh Kopelman on how to start and run an early-stage fund in a hypercompetitive market

Last week at the Upfront Summit in Pasadena, there was no shortage of glitz, from the venue (the Rose Bowl) to the catering (Wolfgang Puck) to the guest list (Ice Cube, Paris Hilton and John Legend, to name just a few). Still, there were also plenty of sessions that provided the investors and founders in the audience practical advice, including, notably, a session led by Upfront co-founder Mark Suster, who interviewed his longtime peer Josh Kopelman of First Round Capital.

The topic was how to raise a debut venture fund — as well as keep the whole operation afloat over time. The bottom line, suggested Kopelman, is that it’s a lot harder than it looks. Indeed, according to other investors at the event with whom we chatted, the seed and early-stage funding environment has grown especially brutal. As more debut funds have sprung up on the scene, more established firms have begun throwing elbows.

Part of Kopelman’s chat with Suster made its way around the Silicon Valley last week, when Axios’s business editor, Dan Primack, tweeted a part of the conversation about First Round’s accelerated deal-making pace. We were also in the audience and think other aspects of the conversation worth flagging, too, including how to establish a brand, how to think about valuations when they’re soaring out of control and how to approach institutional limited partners (or LPs) when trying to raise a fund.

Suster first began by talking about the crowded market, asking Kopelman how First Round has adapted to the resultant pace of dealmaking.

The biggest thing you mentioned is that something that we actually measure is time for decisioning. We’re pretty data driven, so we use Salesforce, [and] we can go back and look at every single company we funded since 2004: the date of that first email with a founder, the date we signed the term sheet. And it’s fascinating. You just see sort of what was a 90-day process shrink to an average of nine.

So that just creates real challenges in terms of your ability to make high-quality and high-confidence decisions. We now have partner meetings twice a week, rather than once a week, because we want to be able to make sure that we’re communicating and talking with our partners in order to be able to, to be able to move quickly enough.

Also, just the proliferation of funds has made brands far more important. You know, when we started, there were just a handful of funds [including those of] Ron Conway, Mike Maples, Jeff Clavier. There were, like, six funds. So imagine if you walked into a Foot Locker, and there were six sneakers on the wall. That was it. You could just try every one to see what fits, which feels the best. [Now imagine] you walk into a Foot Locker, and there are a thousand sneakers on the wall. You’re not going to try all of them. You’re going to have to use proxies. You’re going to have to say, ‘I want the Nike.’ ‘I want the Adidas.’ You’re going to [pick out something] based on brand and that brand is based on persistency, so there are benefits. There are benefits to having been associated with [particular] athletes, in the sneaker metaphor.

And so it’s helped change a little bit the way we [do things] and led us to create things, like the First Round Review; it’s why our [annual] holiday video was so important to us in the first 10 years.

One million healthcare records leaked

The records and images include details such as patient name, date of birth and ID, name of the medical institution, ailment, physician names and other sensitive details. https://ift.tt/37WyoDO https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Govt to notify social media cos in two weeks about IT intermediary guidelines

The Ministry of Electronics and IT (MeitY) will seek the law ministry's views on the validity of the provisions in the draft document before notifying the rules, they said. https://ift.tt/31kzu9Z https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Watch experts from Boston Dynamics, Built, Dusty and Toggle discuss robotic construction at TC Sessions: Robotics

After recently doing a survey of the top robotics investment rounds, it became pretty clear: construction is going to be huge for this industry. Global construction is expected to hit $13 trillion by 2022 (with China alone hitting that number in 2030), and there are plenty of dull, dirty and dangerous jobs that seem well positioned for potential automation.

With that in mind, we’ve put together a fantastic — and packed — panel set to examine how robotics, AI and automation are poised to transform the industry. There’s a wide range of potential opportunities for the right startup, from producing construction materials to surveying sites. The latter, in particular, could amount to a big market for a company that can help correct mistakes before they become too costly.

Today we’re excited to announce that Boston Dynamics’ Construction Technologist Brian Ringley will be joining an already packed panel that includes Built Robotics’ Noah Campbell-Ready, Tessa Lau of Dusty Robotics and Toggle’s Daniel Blank at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI on March 3.

A longtime robotics pioneer, Boston Dynamics is a recent entrant into the construction space. The company’s now commercially available Spot robot is currently being piloted at construction sites. With LIDAR and other imaging technologies mounted on its back, the robot is able to give a more complete picture of in-progress construction sites.

 Save $50 when you book your tickets today as prices go up at the door. We still have a small handful of Startup Exhibitor Packages available that can be booked here. Each package comes with 4 tickets so you can divide and conquer the show to increase your network.

In its first revenue disclosure for Google's cloud division, Alphabet says it generated $2.61B Q4 revenue and $8.92B in fiscal 2019, up from $5.84B YoY (Lauren Feiner/CNBC)

Lauren Feiner / CNBC:
In its first revenue disclosure for Google's cloud division, Alphabet says it generated $2.61B Q4 revenue and $8.92B in fiscal 2019, up from $5.84B YoY  —  - Google broke out numbers for YouTube and cloud for the first time Monday.  — YouTube ads generated $15.15 billion in revenue in fiscal 2019 …



Sunday, February 2, 2020

Delhi High Court 2020 – Delhi Judicial Service Interview Schedule Announced

Delhi High Court has announced interview schedule for Delhi Judicial Service Exam 2019.

Delhi High Court 2020 – Delhi Judicial Service Interview Schedule Announced

Delhi High Court has announced interview schedule for Delhi Judicial Service Exam 2019.

OPSC Result 2020 – Odisha Municipal Administrative Service Exam Final Selection List Released

Odisha Public Service Commission (OPSC) has released Final Selection List for the post of Odisha Municipal Administrative Service Exam.

OPSC 2020 – Odisha Municipal Administrative Service Exam Final Selection List Released

Odisha Public Service Commission (OPSC) has released Final Selection List for the post of Odisha Municipal Administrative Service Exam.

IBPS Clerk Admit Card 2020 – Mains Re Exam Call Letter Download

Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS) released Mains Re Exam Admit Card for the post of Clerk.

IBPS Admit Card 2020 – Clerk Mains Re Exam Call Letter Download

Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS) released Mains Re Exam Admit Card for the post of Clerk.

IBPS Clerk 2020 – Mains Re Exam Admit Card Download

Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS) released Mains Re Exam Admit Card for the post of Clerk IX.

IBPS 2020 – Clerk IX Mains Re Exam Admit Card Download

Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS) released Mains Re Exam Admit Card for the post of Clerk IX.

Watch the New Super Bowl Trailer for Black Widow

Marvel Studios used the 2020 Super Bowl to unveil a 30-second look at Black Widow, the Scarlett Johansson-starrer standalone movie. Black Widow release date in India is April 30. https://ift.tt/36SmJUY

Russia's finance minister says Russian companies have begun using bitcoin and other digital currencies in international payments to counter Western sanctions (Gleb Bryanski/Reuters)

Gleb Bryanski / Reuters : Russia's finance minister says Russian companies have begun using bitcoin and other digital currencies in i...