Cybercrime costs the global economy about $445 billion every year, with the damage to business from the theft of intellectual property exceeding the $160 billion loss to individuals from hacking, according to research published on Monday.
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Monday, 9 June 2014
Cybercrime Costs Global Economy $445 Billion a Year: Report
Cybercrime costs the global economy about $445 billion every year, with the damage to business from the theft of intellectual property exceeding the $160 billion loss to individuals from hacking, according to research published on Monday.
Saturday, 22 June 2013
Toyota Says Its Japanese WebsiteWas Hacked and Abused to DistributeMalware
Sony: Solution to PS3 Bricking Caused by Firmware 4.45 Coming on June 27
Sony Japan has confirmed that an
official solution to the PlayStation 3
bricking issues caused by the faulty
firmware 4.45 will be rolled out on
June 27. Until then, however, owners
of the console will have to make do
without access to it .
PS3 owners from around the world
received a prompt to update their
console’s software at the beginning
of the week, as Sony launched
firmware 4.45 that brought new
options, like the ability to turn off the
trophy notifications.
Sadly, for quite a lot of PS3 users, the
update bricked their consoles , and
they will no longer boot up into the
regular mode.
While workarounds have been found
by some users, Sony hasn't been
that eager to communicate with fans,
limiting itself to taking down update
4.45 in order to avoid the bricking of
other consoles.
Now, thanks to a Sony Japan blog
post, it seems that an official solution
for firmware 4.45 issues will be
revealed on June 27.
No other details were mentioned, so
fans will have to look forward to next
week to fix their PS3s.
Apple wins patent case against Samsung in Japan
A Tokyo court has ruled that Samsung
infringed on Apple's patent covering a
"bounce-back" feature used on the latter's
smartphones and tablets.
Reuters reported Friday that Apple had alleged
Samsung copied its "bounce-back" function, in
which icons on smartphones and tablets quiver
back when users scroll to the end of an
electronic document. Samsung has already
changed its interface on recent models to show
a blue line at the end of documents, the report
noted.
The court's decision comes after the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office in April said
Apple's patent for the "bounce-back" feature
was invalid, allowing older Samsung models
with a similar feature to remain on sale.

