‘Six million LinkedIn passwords stolen’


linked in reuters

London – Around six million users of the social networking site LinkedIn have had their accounts hacked and their passwords stolen, according to technology experts.

The website, popular with businessmen and women, is investigating claims that a file containing 6.5 million encrypted passwords was published on a Russian hackers’ web forum.

Experts are now advising users to change their passwords on LinkedIn and other websites for which they use the same password. They also warn that the stolen passwords are probably already in the hands of criminals if the security breach is genuine.

LinkedIn has more than 160 million users in 200 countries and nine million in the UK.

Graham Cluley, of internet security firm Sophos, said he believed the breach was genuine and warned that the passwords were now likely to be in the hands of criminals.

He added: ‘We’ve confirmed there are LinkedIn passwords in the data. We did this by searching through the data for passwords that we at Sophos use only on LinkedIn. We found those passwords in the data. We also saw that hundreds of the passwords contain the word Linkedin.

‘Our advice is to change your LinkedIn password. And if you use the same password on other accounts, change it there too.’

Per Thorsheim, the internet security expert who first raised the alarm, said that the number of users who may have had their passwords stolen is likely to be around 6.5 million.

The news comes after LinkedIn was forced to change its policies after it was accused of a privacy breach discovered by web security researchers.

The problem concerned a mobile app which sent unencrypted calendar entries, such as phone numbers and passwords for conference calls, to LinkedIn servers without the users’ knowledge.

On Tuesday a hacker with the username ‘dwdm’ appealed for help on the Russian hackers’ forum to decrypt the files and access the original passwords.

By yesterday morning, hackers claimed to have revealed hundreds of thousands of passwords.

Although LinkedIn does not contain a wealth of personal data like other social networking sites such as Facebook, there is a risk that confidential information could be stolen.

There is also a risk that LinkedIn members who use the same password for other websites could be at risk of having other personal data stolen, including bank details.

A spokesman for LinkedIn said: ‘Our team continues to investigate, but at this time we’re still unable to confirm that any security breach has occurred.’ – Daily Mail


ANC won’t endorse land grab – Gwede


Gwede and Afriikaner Community

Related Stories

The ANC tried to soothe farmers on Wednesday after a call by its youth league for the constitution to be changed to allow land to be expropriated without compensation and a warning that Zimbabwe-style land invasions loomed.

ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said the party wouldn’t endorse a land grab, as ANC Youth League deputy president Ronald Lamola said would happen unless whites surrendered their land.

“It is not the ANC policy to expropriate land without compensation, and personally I don’t think it will work,” said Mantashe.

He was speaking after a meeting in Joburg on Wednesday between the ANC and commercial and emerging farmers.

Mantashe said the ANC would discuss land redistribution with the youth league so that its concerns could be addressed at the ruling party’s national policy conference at the end of the month. “It will not be helpful to engage in violent polemics (with the ANCYL) in the run-up to the policy conference. The conference will address land reform in detail,” Mantashe said.

He said the party was discussing how to ensure food security with established and emerging farmers .

The Department of Rural Development and Land Reform, among others, has singled out the willing-buyer, willing-seller approach as the biggest hindrance to achieving the land reform target of transferring 30 percent of agricultural land to black farmers by 2014.

It has proposed in its Green Paper on Land Reform to create an office of a land valuer-general to determine a fair price for land acquisitions.

Lamola warned white South Africans on Tuesday that “whites must voluntarily give up their land if they don’t want to see young black people flooding their farms”.

AfriForum’s legal representative, Willie Spies, said Lamola’s comments amounted to hate speech.

“Lamola specifically referred to, among others, ‘the Van Tonders and the Van der Merwes on farms’ and warned that their safety cannot be guaranteed,” the organisation said.

Spies said AfriForum intended to lay charges against Lamola at both the Equality Court and with police.

Youth league spokeswoman Magdalene Moonsamy said it would not be intimidated and was unapologetic about land reform. “We re-affirm the statement made by the deputy president of the youth league that those who continue to hold land which was illegally and immorally taken away from the indigenous people of South Africa must voluntarily co-operate with the ANC-led government to ensure swift and equitable redistribution of such land to the masses of our people,” she said.

Moonsamy said: “The call of the ANCYL, members of the ANC, the trade unions and South Africans in general for the speedy return of our land and our birth right has never, today, nor will it ever, require approval from unpatriotic white farmers and landowners.”

She added that if necessary “we are prepared to fight with all that we have for that which our people should have”.

She said the willing-buyer, willing-seller principle had failed the people of SA because of greed and at the expense of millions of landless people.

The DA called on the government to reject the youth league’s call.

DA spokesman on rural development and land reform Athol Trollip said any assault on land rights would compromise national food security and job creation.

Political Bureau


Fury after cop shot dead


IOL pic june6 crime tape

Related Stories

A huge manhunt is under way for two armed men who shot and killed an off-duty Lyttelton police officer.

Sergeant Bruwer Smit, known to family, friends and colleagues as “Smittie”, died on Tuesday afternoon while his son Jean-dre, 10, looked on in horror.

Smit was described as a dedicated, passionate and hard-working police officer by co-workers.

Frans Esterhuyse, chairman of the CPF Sector 3, said he met Smit about five years ago when he was part of the trio task team assigned by the Lyttelton police station to focus on armed robberies, hijackings and housebreaking in Sector 3.

“He was a good man, a born cop, and made a huge impact in the community and showed true dedication. We presented him with an award of appreciation in 2010 to thank him for his hard work,” he said.

Esterhuyse said he last spoke to Smit last Thursday. “He said he was going for a bike ride. He was very excited and could not wait to go.”

On Tuesday, Smit – a keen mountain biker – was enjoying a ride with his son near the Zandfontein cemetery on the Mabopane Highway west of Pretoria when he was gunned down.

Police spokeswoman Captain Agnes Huma said he was shot in the neck and died at the scene.

She said the two armed men had emerged from bushes, overpowered Smit and his son, removed Smit’s shoes, tied Jean-dre up with the shoelaces and shot Smit.

“The suspects took his bicycle, money and cellphone and disappeared into the bushes,” said Huma.

Jean-dre freed himself and ran to the main road for help.

Huma said the person who stopped to help the child had seen the suspects passing but did not think much about it. He contacted the police, who arrived quickly.

“We are not sure if he was shot with his own service pistol but we are investigating the possibility,” Huma added.

Colonel Neels Kleinhans, stationed at the SAPS vehicle safeguarding section, said he was Smit’s former immediate commander from 2009 while he was on the trio task team.

Kleinhans said he worked closely with Smit for three years and was shocked when he heard the news.

“He was an exceptional police officer, the type of man you could phone any time of the day or night for help. He always had his pistol by his side. I don’t know what went wrong on Tuesday,” he said.

Twitter was abuzz with messages of shock and condolences on Wednesday.

Sally de Beer tweeted: “RIP Sergeant Smit, sympathy to his family and colleagues.”

SAPoliceService tweeted: “Condolences to family, colleagues and friends. Senseless killing. This must stop.”

Zinhle Ngubane tweeted: “It sickens me to see the public kill the people who are supposed to protect them. RIP to all the fallen heroes.”

 

Provincial duty officer Lieutenant-Colonel Tshisikhawe Ndou said the manhunt was still on. He said Jean-dre was being treated for shock and was undergoing counselling from SAPS counsellors.

 

The Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union said it was enraged by the brutal killing.

 

Anyone with information is asked to call the Hercules police station on 012 377 4100, 012 377 0320, crime stop on 08600 10111 or Lt Col Makhunufane on 082 319 9737.

Pretoria News


‘Zuma axes Bheki Cele’


IOL news june 7 cele may 26

Related Stories

National Police Commissioner General Bheki Cele will soon – possibly as early as Thursday –leave the service in disgrace.

Three police sources have confirmed to Independent Newspapers that Cele was informed of his imminent axing on Wednesday, but that the official announcement – which was supposed to have taken place on Wednesday – had been postponed at the eleventh hour.

The sources confirmed that Cele had been instructed to vacate his office and that his replacement was due to report for duty on July 1.

President Jacob Zuma may have delayed the announcement following fresh developments in the Pretoria High Court on Wednesday afternoon in which now-you-see-me-now-you-don’t crime intelligence boss, Lieutenant-General Richard Mdluli, was barred from performing any duties in the police.

An announcement of Cele’s dismissal on the same day would have come as a severe body blow to an already punch-drunk police service reeling under claims of political interference in internal police investigations, ongoing turf wars and allegations of a spillover into the police of party political manoeuvring in the run-up to the ANC’s elective conference in December.

Presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said on Wednesday night: “All I can say is that the president will make known his decision when he is ready to do so.”

A board of inquiry appointed by Zuma to determine whether Cele was fit to hold office recommended last month that he be fired. It found that, in pushing for the police and public works departments to lease the overpriced buildings of businessman Roux Shabangu, Cele had acted “dishonestly” and “with an undeclared conflict of interest”.

“(T)he board is duty bound to recommend that the president … orders his removal from office. The evidence proved abundantly that there was a questionable relationship between (Cele) and Shabangu … and between Shabangu and the officials within the Department of Public Works, on the other hand, as well as between (Cele) and some members of the SAPS,” chairman Judge Jake Moloi concluded.

This followed similar findings by Public Protector Thuli Madonsela last year. Her investigation concluded that Cele’s involvement in the leasing scandal was “improper, unlawful” and amounted to “maladministration”, prompting widespread calls for the general’s head to roll. But Cele was suspended, pending the outcome of the board of inquiry.

Cele could not be reached for comment on Wednesday night. Eyewitness News reported on Thursday morning that Cele said he had not heard from Zuma, nor had he heard any rumours that he had been fired.

There has been mounting speculation in recent weeks that Zuma may replace Cele with advocate Nathi Nhleko, currently the director-general in the Department of Labour and an old colleague of Zuma’s.

However, Maharaj last week dismissed these rumours.

Two police sources confirmed on Wednesday night that Nhleko had already undergone a preliminary vetting process, but a third suggested that Zuma had had a last-minute change of heart and was now considering a woman for the position.

Acting police chief Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi is perceived in some quarters as being too independently minded to be given the job on a permanent basis. This view has gained currency after Mkhwanazi bucked the trend by moving against Mdluli. –

Political Bureau

POLICE RELENTLESS EFFORTS TO STABILIZE MOROLENG KANANA PUBLIC VIOLENCE


BY Obakeng Maje

Situation is still tense at  Moruleng near Rustenburg, where about 32 villages are involved in protest action.

These protests started again last night where protestors barricaded roads bringing traffic to a standstill. Consequently teachers could not reach schools and schools were closed for the day and workers were also affected. Especially  mine workers travelling from the surrounding places.

 

According to the information received at the time of release there are 36 people arrested in total, Moroleng accounts for 19 and Kanana 17 arrests made.

Amongst the people arrested it’s the two suspects who are facing charges of arson after one person was seen burning a business shop owned by an employee of Bakgatla tribal Authority.

“The other suspect was also charged with arson after he set alight a vehicle. All those arrested in Kanana were charged for public violence, while the charges of those in Moroleng differed” Brigadier Ngubane.

The charges ranged from public violence, malicious damage to property and Arson.

 

The major incidents that took place earlier this morning during the protest include the burning of a buss belonging to Bajanala Bus Company.

 

It is alleged that the bus driver was stopped, taken out of the bus assaulted before the bus was set alit, one suspect arrested was arrested in the incident. Second one is malicious damage and petrol bombing of  the house of the councilor at Moses Kotane Local Municipality, one suspect arrested on this incident.

Thirdly two trucks in Kanana were stoned and badly damaged.

 

The police continue making relentless efforts to instill order in the affected areas, appealing to the community to reach common ground and find better ways of expressing their frustration. Public violence and damage to property will never be the answer.

 

 

FIFA warns of painkiller abuse


FIFA’s Chief Medical Officer Professor Jiri Dvorak has said that the ‘abuse’ of painkillers could put the careers and long-term health of footballers in jeopardy.

During the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™, FIFA’s Medical Department asked team doctors to provide a list of medications which players were taking prior to each game. Previous surveys at international tournaments established that many players were using large numbers of painkilling and non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

The results from South Africa 2010, published recently in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, show higher levels of use than ever before. Indeed, 39 per cent of all players took painkillers before every game.

Experts warn that painkilling medication can be particularly dangerous in professional sport. In high-intensity exercise like football, a player’s kidneys are continuously working hard, making them more vulnerable to damage from strong drugs.

2010 FIFA World Cup study

Prof Jiri Dvorak said: “Since 1998 we’ve collected data about the intake of medication for all players at every FIFA tournament, which roughly equates to 55 competitions from U-17 tournaments to senior club and national team competitions.

“The results are striking. Even at U-17 level, between 20-25 per cent of players are taking anti-inflammatory drugs and painkillers and this increases to senior World Cup levels, which sees 30-35 per cent of usage. When we combine that with the usage of non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, it equates to about half of the players.

“Some of the players are probably taking this medication without a prescription from the team doctors, they’re just taking them and then telling the doctor. Others are taking them under prescription from the doctors as they’re suffering some kind of pain or discomfort.

“But other players could also be using these painkillers in advance to reduce the pain caused by potential discomfort during a match. That could be dangerous. By masking symptoms through painkillers, you could be covering something which could be important in the long run.

Dangers of abusing painkillers (and supplements)

“First of all, we need to raise awareness with the physicians responsible for the teams in all member associations so they think twice before prescribing this type of medication.

“Every medication you take has potential side effects, such as the building of blood content, but it could also have a negative effect on the function of the liver and kidneys, particularly if a particular medication has been taken for a long time. Some of the medications can also irritate the gastro-intestinal tract which can lead to internal bleeding of different magnitudes.

FIFA.com

Banyana Olympic squad announced


The SA Sports Confederation an Olympic Committee has announced the Banyana Banyana squad for the 2012 London Olympic Games. 

Sascoc has revealed the 112-member initial team for the tournament today; the final team will be announced on July 4.

“Today’s announcement is the culmination of four years of extremely hard work for everyone, both at Sascoc and in the broader South African sports fraternity,” Sascoc President Gideon Sam says.

“I’ve always said that the building of a team is like doing a jigsaw puzzle. So today we are putting just about the final pieces of that puzzle into place with only a few more additions likely after the final qualification cut-off.

“Make no bones about it, we could have done better if we had more funding but that’s always the case. The time for excuses is over and I believe that we have done the very best that we could have done under the circumstances. 

“There was the criticism over the clothing sponsor but we believe we’ve done our absolute best and when you see our stars turn out at the Olympics and Paralympics I think you’ll agree.”

A total of 16 sporting codes will be represented, ranging from archery to weightlifting, and it will be the first time that Banyana Banyana will be competing.

Banyana squad
Roxanne Barker, Zamandosi Cele, Amanda Dlamini, Judith Hlumbane, Refiloe Jane, Kylie-Ann Louw, Noko Matlou, Andisiwe Mgcoyi, Philadelphia Mndaweni, Portia Modise, Sanah Mollo, Robyn Moodaly, Marry Ntsweng, Nompumelelo Nyandeni, Amanda Sister, Leandra Smeda, Janine van Wyk, Nothando Vilakazi

Manager: Lydia Monyepao
Coach: Joseph Mkhonza, Matsobane Laka
Technical adviser: Ephraim Mashaba.

Mathoho’s path to Chiefs cleared


Orlando Pirates have officially pulled out of the race to sign Erick Mathoho from Bloemfontein Celtic. 

Don’t miss: Celtic may be willing to sell Mathoho to Chiefs

This gives way to Kaizer Chiefs to snatch up the highly sought-after player.

“We are no longer interested in signing Mathoho and are currently looking at other players that we intend to bring to Pirates next season,” the official at Pirates tells KickOff.com.

“It looks like his agent has already taken him to Kaizer Chiefs.”

Mathoho has already indicated that he is done with Phunya Sele Sele and according to our sources both Celtic and Amakhosi are set to to meet soon to finalise the deal. 

The defender has reportedly already agreed personal terms with Chiefs and is waiting for the clubs to finalise his transfer fee before putting his signature on the dotted line.

Ernest Fakude

‘Drinking water won’t help weight loss’


paris water lib

Related Stories

 

London – Health advice to drink eight glasses of water a day is over the top and does not help with weight loss, says a leading nutritionist.

Fruit, vegetables and juices should have a major role in providing the fluids we need, he added.

Spero Tsindos, an academic and public health expert, also argued that the push to encourage people to drink more water was driven by vested interests.

Tsindos said sales of bottled water had risen in tandem with guidance from bodies such as the National Health Service telling individuals to drink large volumes.

He said the NHS had reinforced the notion that two litres or eight glasses of water a day was good for health “without any substantial evidence to support it”. If people drink two litres of water in a hurry to make up their daily allowance it will not hydrate the cells that need it – but simply dilute the urine, he pointed out.

Health and dietary authorities generally recommend two litres a day of fluid for optimal health, but “this has been misinterpreted to mean two litres of water specifically and it has driven a steady growth in the use of bottled water”.

Tsindos says in an editorial in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health: “Thirty years ago you didn’t see a plastic water bottle anywhere, now they appear as fashion accessories.

“As tokens of instant gratification and symbolism, the very bottle itself is seen as cool and hip.”

While water was now regarded as a slimming aid, tea and coffee were being wrongly shunned as potentially leading to dehydration. Tsindos, of the department of dietetics and human nutrition at La Trobe University, in Melbourne, added: “Drinking large amounts of water does not alone cause weight loss. A low-calorie diet is also required.

“Research has also revealed that water in food eaten has a greater benefit in weight reduction than avoiding foods altogether. We should be telling people that beverages like tea and coffee contribute to a person’s fluid needs and, despite their caffeine content, do not lead to dehydration.”

He said food, juices, fruit and vegetables also contribute to overall intake. “We need to maintain fluid balance and should drink water, but also consider fluid in unprocessed fruits and vegetables and juices.”

Independent dietician Dr Carrie Ruxton said individuals tend not to drink enough. She added: “Drinking water is useful for weight loss, as part of a strategy of eating less and being more active. Research shows a glass of water before meals reduces appetite.

“I agree that caffeine is wrongly thought to be dehydrating, people can drink up to eight cups of tea or four cups of coffee a day and be reassured that it’s healthy.”

A spokesman for British Bottled Water Producers said the World Health Organisation and the British Dietetic Association recommends the average 60kg (9.5stone) adult should drink 1.5 to 2 litres (3.5 pints) of fluid a day.

She said: ‘”t a time when many people are overweight and there is a tendency to drink too much alcohol, it cannot be disputed that water is the safest, simplest route to calorie-free, toxin-free, safe and healthy hydration.” – Daily Mail

Absa, Edcon in R10bn store card deal


absa_may 6

Reuters

Absa, the South African unit of Britain’s Barclays Plc, will pay 10 billion rand ($1.18 billion) to buy the private label store card portfolio in South Africa of clothing and footwear retailer Edcon, the companies said on Wednesday.

The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2012.

“(The deal will) strengthen Absa Bank’s position in the unsecured retail credit sector, build a strategic relationship with one of South Africa’s leading retailers and allow Absa to make a greater range of financial services products available to existing and new customers,” the company said in a statement.

Edcon said the deal would boost credit sales, improve its balance sheet and allow the retailer to focus on and fund growth in its core business activities.

The Edcon store card business operates primarily in South Africa, with smaller operations in Botswana, Namibia, Lesotho and Swaziland.

While Absa plans to also buy Edcon’s portfolios in the neighbouring countries, it is not a condition to the South African deal.

Under the deal, Absa will provide retail credit to Edcon customers, while Edcon will be responsible for all customer-facing activities.

Absa shares were up 0.73 percent at 152 rand by 09:25 SA time, outperforming a 0.08 percent rise in the JSE Top-40 index of blue chip companies. – Reuters