qp

You are currently browsing articles tagged qp.

At Arlanda, Stockholm, waiting for my flight...

… and I’m sitting in Arlanda airport reading todays trackbacks (MMN is contemplating the differences between older political parties and the Pirate Party when it comes to open communication, in Swedish).

I’m going to Finland just for the day and will go back this evening. Just work in other words ;)

We had Juan Santana, CEO of Panda Security, visit us here in Sweden last week but I unfortunately missed it as I had a training to attend. He talked about how we’re moving our technology into “the cloud” in order to avoid placing CPU/Memory consuming technology on our customers endpoints, and also mentioned a new product BETA that implements this (Nano).

Got to go to my gate now…

Cheers,

Tags: , ,

Q.P. = QuickPost, These are posts with no images or other media, most oftenly written while traveling.

The Register hilariously comments on the proposed law in Mexico that would mandate the registration of fingerprints when you buy a phone:

Phone owners not thinking of rolling someone up in a carpet and throwing them off a bridge have been urged to report lost or stolen mobile phones immediately. And don’t eBay your old phone when you upgrade, or pass it on to a pal.

After all, you don’t want to get stuck with an unpaid bill and a kidnapping charge…

As funny as their article is, the real issue is not. This is an ongoing trend of creating laws that do not serve the intended purpose and that is not likely to be followed (and in turn create a huge black market of imported phones, thus creating more criminals).

We’re seeing the same in Sweden with the IPRED implementation and the data retention directive, and the same in Finland with “Lex Nokia“. Laws aimed at trapping criminals that are already obsolete as those have already learnt how to avoid them.

The only ones (as in the case with DRM) being “punished” and controlled are those that are already following the law, the ordinary tax-payers, not the criminals/terrorists/evil genious villains.

I wan’t to say “LOL” in a sarcastic way, but it’s not even funny that way either.

Tags: , , , , ,

All was well at IT-SecurityWorld and I got a chance to say hi to Patrik Fältström at the end of the day. That was nice even though he gave me (and Panda ;) ) a small kick for not being IPv6 ready with our services. I have a feeling that we’re not alone though and all the points he keep making in the seminars I’ve seen him hold has always been very valid. People need to begin make the shift and stop being so comfortable as soon as possible.

In other news, the European parliament is about to vote on the Medina Report, which is going to set the direction for all future IP-rights enforcement work. It suggests, among other things, censorship of uncomfortable sites and traffic throttling. It also names The Pirate Bay as a primary target and this has not been well recieved here in Sweden as it can be considered interfering with an ongoing investigation and trial.

Not very nice. More information about this report and it’s ramifications can be found here:

IPTegrity – A Net dilemma for the European Parliament
IPTegrity – Libraries call to reject Medina report
La Quadrature Du Net – Copyright dogmatism ridiculously strikes the European Parliament

In other “work news” I recieved a request for comment on the surfacing issues of states implementing laws that make it legal for police to hack into computers and plant trojans from Christian Rudolf (Swedish site) over at Mjukvara.se (Swedish site). The question was if we as a security vendor would cooperate with the police in these situations and our position in this matter was summarized nicely internally when we discussed this:

Our position is that we will always detect all trojans to protect our customers, even if they pass a law to make a legal police trojan in Germany or anywhere else. If they take us to court of justice or make any type of pressure to make us whitelist their trojan, we will fight against it.

The americans have a typical phrase that fits well into this situation: “they’ll have to pry the detection signature from our cold, dead hands!”

It’s nice to see Panda Reseach and Labs have a sober view on this. Not that I didn’t expect them to, but the silence from some vendors are speaking for itself. The only ones responding to the inquiry on Mjukvara.se was Panda Security, Symantec and Avast. All of us stating that we would not whitelist any trojans. Ever.

Worth noting though is that there has been some trouble with this earlier with some vendors involving a specialized FBI-trojan called Magic Lantern. Let’s hope that the vendors that ignored this trojan change and follow up on their current promises.

And one last thing, I’m in need of some help from someone that knows virtualization (VmWare or similar). Working on setting up a multiple host, multiple network, multiple function solution and I would like to ask someone that knows more about this than me. So if you’re skilled and feel like giving me some quick A’s to my Q’s, please drop me an e-mail (daniel dot nystrom at icmpecho dot com) or comment on this post!

Cheers,

Tags: , , , , ,

Sitting in Arlanda Airport waiting for my flight to Gellivare, a small town in the north of Sweden.

This trip has not been welled planned as I actually managed to screw up my schedule and miss the first meeting we had booked. Not like me to do stuff like that. Well well, there’s got to be a first for everything… as long as theres no second.

In other news, the youth organization Ung Pirat (Young Pirates) has been granted ~130000€ by Ungdomsstyrelsen (a board that decides which youth organization should get support by the state) to further their activities and politics. “Ung Pirat” is the third largest youth org. in Sweden with 4800 members. Congratulations to them!

The Register also reports that the UK gov. is planning the creation of a “Rights agency” that are to “clamp down” on p-2-p users (whatever that means).

Meanwhile over at Isle of Man, they’re pushing for a compulsory tax for filesharing. Surprisingly enough the major record labels are positive (irony) and supports the idea. Someone please explain to me how this could ever be a good idea.. also please explain to me how these taxes would be evenly distributed among all artists being shared? Can I just create a band, put my stuff on ThePiratebay under a fake name, and then claim part of the tax money? Or do I need to be a big record label to get any of it? Bad idea overall…

Yeye… my flight’s leaving.

Tags: , , ,

Sitting in a café at Arlanda Airport waiting for my 8 o’ clock flight to Madrid. From there I’ll go to Bilbao. Got up at 04:00 this morning so I’m feeling very tired right now.

There was a snowstorm this Monday and Arlanda has been running at reduced speed earlier this week, but now everything is cleared up and my flight is on time.

In the news this morning I see that the “The Pirate Bay”-trial has been initiated. That’s nice. In my opinion it’s a disgrase that such a high profile case takes two years to initiate. No matter the outcome it will be a very interesting trial. I just hope that the Swedish courts does it’s job and realize that you cannot punish a BBS, no matter what it’s purpose is. If they choose to do so, then I’m guessing that there will be hundreds of cases made against search engines such as Google that actually store (cache) copyrighted materials.

For many artists, at least in Sweden, “TPB” is their primary distribution channel. Ruining that would destroy far more culture than it would generate.

Yeah yeah.. We’ll see what happens.

Other news in Sweden today is that the Government wants to institute laws for other countries, but I’m not even going to get started on that. It’s just embarrassing. Reality-check please.

Cheers ;)

Tags: , , , , , ,

… by car. Falun is a quite small city in the Swedish landscape Dalarna.

Using my new 3G/HSDPA USB stick and it works great. I’m in the middle of nowhere and I got a high strength signal. Makes me think of how much wireless technology has evolved during the last 5 years and how widely accessible it is.

In other news, participated in my first “Readers panel” over at The Local. The questions posed are mostly about the Swedish society and this month the question was “What do you think about the Swedish alcohol policy?”. As usual I was too serious about it and ended up sounding like a politician ;)

In Sweden the FRA-law moves ahead without any of the amendments being implemented as these are scheduled to be included in October 2009. Not good, but really no news. This was announced at the same time that the amendments were presented so I don’t really feel surprised. Same fascistic law anyhow, with or without the pink bow.

PS. For those new to this blog, posts that starts with “Q.P.” are “QuickPosts”. This means that I’m most often on the move while writing them and they won’t have any nice, illustrative, images like most of my other posts. .DS

Tags: , , , ,