Tuesday 1 January 2013

NASA WAS HACKED 13 TIMES LAST YEAR

NASA said hackers broke into its computer systems 13 times last year, stealing employee credentials
and gaining access to mission-critical projects in breaches that could compromise US national security.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration spends only $58 million of its $1.5 billion annual IT budget on cyber security, Paul Martin, the agency's inspector general, told a Congressional panel on NASA security earlier this week.

"Some NASA systems house sensitive information which, if lost or stolen, could result in significant financial loss, adversely affect national security, or significantly impair our nation's competitive technological advantage," Martin said in testimony before the US House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, released on Wednesday.

He said the agency discovered in November that hackers working through a Chinese-based IP address broke into the network of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

He said they gained full system access, which allowed them to modify, copy, or delete sensitive files, create user accounts for mission-critical JPL systems and upload hacking tools to steal user credentials and compromise other NASA systems. They were also able to modify system logs to conceal their actions, he said.

"Our review disclosed that the intruders had compromised the accounts of the most privileged JPL users, giving the intruders access to most of JPL's networks," he said.

In another attack last year, intruders stole credentials for accessing NASA systems from more than 150 employees.

Martin said the agency has moved too slowly to encrypt or scramble the data on its laptop computers to protect information from falling into the wrong hands.

Unencrypted notebook computers that have been lost or stolen include ones containing codes for controlling the International Space Station as well as sensitive data on NASA's Constellation and Orion programs and Social Security numbers, Martin said.

5 top technology trends for 2013

1.  Hybrid IT and cloud computing.
A recently conducted survey revealed that the internal cloud services brokerage (CSB) role is emerging as IT organizations realize that they have a responsibility to help improve the provisioning and consumption of inherently distributed, heterogeneous and often complex cloud services for their internal users and external business partners.

The internal CSB role represents a means for the IT organization to retain and build influence inside its organization and to become a value center in the face of challenging new requirements relative to increasing adoption of cloud as an approach to IT consumption. 




2. Mobile device battles

    By 2013 mobile phones will overtake PCs as the most common web access device worldwide and that by 2015 over 80 per cent of the handsets sold in mature markets will be smartphones. However, only 20 per cent of those handsets are likely to be Windows phones.

   It is expected that by 2015 tablet shipments will reach around 50 per cent of laptop
shipments and Windows 8 will likely be in third place behind Google's Android and Apple iOS operating systems.Enterprises will need to support a greater variety of form factors reducing the ability to standardise PC and tablet hardware. The implications for IT is that the era of PC dominance with Windows as the single platform will be replaced with a post-PC era where Windows is just one of a variety of environments IT will need to support. 


3. Mobile applications and HTML 5

    The market for tools to create consumer and enterprise facing apps is complex with well over 100 potential tools vendors. For the next few years, no single tool will be optimal for all types of mobile application so expect to employ several. Six mobile architectures - native, special, hybrid, HTML 5, Message and No Client will remain popular.
   However, there will be a long term shift away from native apps to Web apps as HTML5 becomes more capable.

4. Personal cloud

    The personal cloud will gradually replace the PC. The personal cloud will entail the unique collection of services, web destinations and connectivity that will become the home of their computing and communication activities.

   Users will see it as a portable, always-available place where they go for all their digital needs. In this world no one platform, form factor, technology or vendor will dominate and managed diversity and mobile device management will be an imperative. The personal cloud shifts the focus from the client device to cloud-based services delivered across devices. 

5.  Enterprise app stores
   Enterprises face a complex app store future as some vendors will limit their stores to specific devices and types of apps forcing the enterprise to deal with multiple stores, multiple payment processes and multiple sets of licensing terms.

    By 2014, it is expected that many organizations will deliver mobile applications to workers through private application stores. With enterprise app stores the role of IT shifts from that of a centralized planner to a market manager providing governance and brokerage services to users and potentially an ecosystem to support apptrepreneurs.



Aurangabad blood bank launches new screening system

AURANGABAD: The Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Vaidikiya Pratisthan Trust's Dattaji Bhale blood bank has introduced the Nucleic Acid Technology (NAT) to screen its donors, said Mahendrasingh Chauhan, medical director and in charge of the blood bank.

Blood transfusion has drastically changed modern medicine, and NAT has revolutionised testing of infectious diseases in the modern blood banking. The technology reduces the 'window period' of the test - the time between the first infection and when the test can reliably detect that infection - and helps in early diagnosis of HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C.

The blood bank has so far supplied more than two lakh units of blood and blood products and hopes to scale greater heights in the coming years with the introduction of new and advanced technologies.

Noted physician Satish Kulkarni said, "The testing for critical agents was initiated at the Dattaji Bhale bank for its donors well before the test was made mandatory by the government. The setting up of the apheresis machine for single donor platelets and Hepatitis B vaccination for donors are a few more initiatives to add to the list."

Chauhan explained that the current conventional test procedures such as ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay - a test for qualitative detection of antigens or antibodies to specific viruses in human serum or plasma) identify these deadly viruses only after a period of 30 to 70 days after infection. This period is called the window period in medical terms, where laboratory tests cannot determine the presence of antibodies against these infections. The NAT test directly helps detect the DNA/RNA of the viruses within 6-8 days, which helps bridge the window period and greatly reduces the risk of transfusion-transmitted infections."

The fully-automated, US-FDA approved, NAT screening system at the blood bank can reduce chances of human error and facilitates testing of a huge number of samples at one go, with great ease. "The machine can also screen for HIV-2, which is prevalent in the Indian population, along with HIV 1, HBV and HCV. The entire testing is well monitored at every step to ensure accurate results," Chauhan added.

"The spread of these fatal diseases through transfusion is a serious matter of concern as donated blood is further divided into components such as red blood cells, platelets and plasma. This means that infected blood can affect as many as three to four different patients and can further spread in a chain process. Hence, an efficient testing protocol and implementation of sophisticated technologies such as NAT is the only answer to ensure further safety," said Anil Bhalerao, chief executive officer, Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Vaidikiya Pratisthan Trust.

He added that in keeping with the tradition of continual improvement, the blood bank would start issuing 100% NAT tested blood to all its patients. Sangeeta Pathak, senior consultant and head of the blood bank at Max Super Specialty Hospital, New Delhi, also shared her experience on NAT technology on the occasion.