Thursday, July 31, 2014

Microsoft em negociações para comprar startup de segurança cibernética israelense por US $ 200 milhões


Aorato foi formalmente lançada há menos de seis meses, em janeiro de 2014, por veteranos das Forças de Defesa de Israel, com um foco específico em mente: criar uma empresa de segurança cibernética dedicada a tecnologias da Microsoft. Nesses seis meses, a empresa teve um enorme
sucesso, com uma lista de  investidores de alto perfil, apoiadores, e uma placa diversificada, com grande experiência na indústria de TI. Agora, com menos de um ano depois de seu lançamento inicial, o foco da Aorato no fornecimento de segurança para os produtos da Microsoft, como o Active Directory pode valer US $ 200 milhões.

De acordo com uma fonte não identificada do Wall Street Journal, a própria Microsoft está em negociações para comprar Aorato. A oferta aparente vem logo depois de uma rodada de captação de recursos em que Aorato levantou quase US $ 10 milhões em financiamento de vários investidores.

Mas a oferta da Microsoft para comprar a empresa de segurança por US $ 200 milhões a uma ordem de magnitude maior do que qualquer captação de recursos que recebemos até o momento, e a empresa tem mantido uma estreita relação com a Microsoft desde a sua criação, um fator que pode influenciar fortemente a decisão do gigante de comprar Aorato.

A empresa de segurança se juntou recentemente a Active Protections Programa da Microsoft, e a lista dos principais clientes ao redor do mundo, incluindo Boston empresa Trusteer, parte da divisão de segurança de computadores da IBM.

Aorato está crescendo rápido, no início já valeu a pena, mas a Microsoft com uma oferta 200 milhões dólares oferta, embora disse para fechar dentro dos próximos dois meses, ainda está em discussão.


Missão Econômica de Israel no Brasil


Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Brazilian president makes "Internet for all" pledge

Summary: Dilma Rousseff releases first tech-related promise ahead of upcoming elections.
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech

With three months to go until the presidential elections in Brazil, current president and candidate for reelection Dilma Rousseff has made her first tech-related pledge.

Soon after the World Cup is over, presidential candidates will kick off their campaigns - and rolling out Internet access that is accessible to all Brazilian citizens is part of Rousseff's promises if she gets a second
term.

In a video released yesterday (10) the president says the program "Band Larga Para Todos" (Broadband For All, in Portuguese) will aim at providing cheaper and faster Internet access to those who don't have it yet.

She added that as well as connecting digitally excluded Brazilians, the idea is to broaden the fiber optic infrastructure of the country, which would result in faster access.

"The Internet is not only a tool used for socializing, but also an important tool in education and one that allows participation [of citizens] in government decisions," Rousseff says.

The president said details of the pledge - such as how the new plan would fit into the broader National Broadband Plan and separate initiatives such as the government's partnership with Google to bring connect remote areas with balloons - would be released during the election campaign.


Only 43 percent of Brazilian households have access to broadband - but mobile Internet access has doubled in the last couple of years, according to recent research. The main justification for the lack of Internet access given by households that do own a computer in Brazil is the cost of services.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

June Newsletter – Software Defined Networking (SDN)

Vega newsletter is published monthly by Vega BI, and distributed to our partners to facilitate pursuit of a common interest in top-notch technologies.
Every day, Traditional network architectures are ill-suited to meet the requirements of today’s enterprises, carriers, and end users. Thanks to a broad industry effort spearheaded by the Open Networking Foundation (ONF), Software- Defined Networking (SDN) is transforming networking architecture.
Software Defined Networking is our topic of the month. Read an executive summary of our monthly technical review.


Software- Defined Networking (SDN)
Software-defined Networking (SDN) is a new approach to designing, building and managing networks. The basic concept is that SDN separates the network’s control (brains) and forwarding (muscle) planes to make it easier to optimize each.

SDN approach to computer networking allows network administrators to manage network services through abstraction of lower level functionality. This is done by decoupling the system that makes decisions about where traffic is sent (the control plane) from the underlying systems that forward traffic to the selected destination (the data plane). The inventors and vendors of these systems claim that this simplifies networking. SDN requires some method for the control plane to communicate with the data plane. One such mechanism, Open Flow, but other mechanisms could also fit into the concept.

In this environment, a Controller acts as the “brains,” providing an abstract, centralized view of the overall
network. Through the Controller, network administrators can quickly and easily make and push out decisions on how the underlying systems (switches, routers) of the forwarding plane will handle the traffic. The most common protocol used in SDN networks to facilitate the communication between the Controller (called the Southbound API) and the switches is currently OpenFlow.

An SDN environment also uses open, application programmatic interfaces (APIs) to support all the services and applications running over the network. These APIs, commonly called Northbound APIs, facilitate innovation and enable efficient service orchestration and automation. As a result, SDN enables a network administrator to shape traffic and deploy services to address changing business needs, without having to touch each individual switch or router in the forwarding plane.

SDN is Not OpenFlow
Often people point to OpenFlow as being synonymous with SDN, but it is only a single element in the overall SDN architecture. OpenFlow is an open standard for a communications protocol that enables the control plane to interact with the forwarding plane. It must be noted that OpenFlow is not the only protocol available or in development for SDN – for example, the Open Networking Lab (ON.Lab) will soon release an open source Network OS, called ONOS.


The Benefits of SDN
With a centralized, programmable network that can automatically and dynamically address changing requirements, SDN offers:
  • Service provisioning speed and agility: Setting up networks in an SDN can be as easy as creating VM instances, and the way SDNs can be set up is a far better complement to VMs than plain old physical networks.
  • Network flexibility and holistic management: SDNs enable “network experimentation without impact” - meaning one can leap over the limits imposed by SNMP and experiment freely with new network configurations without being hamstrung by their consequences.
  • Better and more granular security: VMs have made network security a headache and a half. SDNs can provide the kind of fine-grained security for apps, endpoints and BYOD devices that a conventional hard-wired network cannot.
  • Efficiency and lower operating expenses: The exact cost savings of SDNs is still in doubt - for example, it's unclear whether it might simply shift costs to controllers and software. Still, 50% of the administrators surveyed who use SDNs said they sold the technology to their business executives as a money-saving methodology. And while many of those polled see lower hardware costs as a big SDN selling point, the bigger opportunity is lower opex costs due to improved network management efficiency, according to the report.
  • Virtual network services, lowered capex/ OpEX: Even if the biggest benefits for SDNs will be in big-league data centers, there’s still plenty of ways for enterprises to lower their capex - both by making better use of what enterprises already have, and by lessening dependencies on proprietary hardware and dedicated appliances.

The Near-Term Future
The SDN revolution today is extremely turbulent. Presently, its development is focused heavily on the large data center and virtualization space. It may very well evolve into a useful tool for the enterprise and service provider space in the future, but there is a lot of work that needs doing by everyone involved before that can happen.

For more ...... See Vega's June  Newsletter

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Fewer than half of Brazilian homes have broadband access

Summary: Half of Brazilian homes have broadband access But mobile internet access keeps going up
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech

Only 43 percent of Brazilian households have access to broadband - but mobile Internet access has doubled in the last couple of years, according to recent research.

The research carried out by the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee (CGI.br) covered about 17,000
households and found that out the 27 million connected homes in Brazil, the biggest chunk - 51 percent - is concentrated in the richer southeast, where São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro are located.

According to the study, the main justification for the lack of Internet access given by households that do own a computer - about 30,6 million homes - is the cost of broadband services.

On the other hand, mobile Internet access keeps increasing in Brazil. The CGI.br research suggests that the number of Brazilians that access the Internet through mobile devices reached 52,5 million people, a 31 percent of all Brazilians older than 10 years old - back in 2011, 15 percent accessed the Internet through their mobiles.

Other statistics in the research related to the types of computing devices Brazilians own partly explain the slow residential broadband uptake: 49 percent of Brazilian homes had desktop computers in 2013 - three percentage points higher than it was in 2012 - while mobile phones were present in 90 percent of households.

According to the CGI.br research, about 85 percent of Brazilians aged over 10 own mobile phones, which corresponds to about 143 million Brazilians.


The study by the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee was carried out between September 2013 to February 2014 in 350 cities.

Monday, July 21, 2014

SDN - Software Defined Networking: The New Norm for Networks


Executive Summary
Traditional network architectures are ill-suited to meet the requirements of today’s enterprises, carriers, and end users. Thanks to a broad industry effort spearheaded by the Open Networking Foundation (ONF), Software- Defined Networking (SDN) is transforming networking architecture.

In the SDN architecture, the control and data planes are decoupled, network intelligence and state are logically centralized, and the underlying network infrastructure is abstracted from the applications. As a result, enterprises and carriers gain unprecedented programmability, automation, and network control, enabling them to build highly scalable, flexible networks that readily adapt to changing business needs. The ONF is a non-profit industry consortium that is leading the advancement of SDN and standardizing critical elements of the SDN architecture such as the OpenFlow protocol, which structures communication between the control and data planes of supported network devices. OpenFlow is the first standard interface designed specifically for SDN, providing high-performance, granular traffic control across multiple vendors’ network devices. OpenFlow-based SDN is currently being rolled out in a variety of networking devices and software, delivering substantial benefits to both enterprises and carriers, including:
  • Centralized management and control of networking devices from multiple vendors; 
  • Improved automation and management by using common APIs to abstract the underlying networking details from the orchestration and provisioning systems and applications; 
  • Rapid innovation through the ability to deliver new network capabilities and services without the need to configure individual devices or wait for vendor releases; 
  • Programmability by operators, enterprises, independent software vendors, and users (not just equipment manufacturers) using common programming environments, which gives all parties new opportunities to drive revenue and differentiation; 
  • Increased network reliability and security as a result of centralized and automated management of network devices, uniform policy enforcement, and fewer configuration errors; 
  • More granular network control with the ability to apply comprehensive and wide-ranging policies at the session, user, device, and application levels; and 
  • Better end-user experience as applications exploit centralized network state information to seamlessly adapt network behavior to user needs. 
SDN is a dynamic and flexible network architecture that protects existing investments while future-proofing the network. With SDN, today’s static network can evolve into an extensible service delivery platform capable of responding rapidly to changing business, end-user, and market needs.


Israeli 3D tech behind ‘ultimate selfie’ sports drone


Latvian company uses Stratasys’ born-in-Israel printers in world’s first drone for extreme sports photography
By David Shamah, The Times of Israel


Israeli-developed 3D printing technology is helping a Latvian company enable extreme sports enthusiasts take the ultimate selfie — a drone that follows them and shoots video of their performances from the air as they do triple wheelies, a “360” on a skateboard, ride the surf, or any of their other adrenaline-pumping activities.

Using 3D printers developed in Israel by Minnesota-based Stratasys — which merged with Israel’s Objet 3D Printers in 2012 — Helico Aerospace Industries, the company behind the AirDog, has been “printing” components of just the right size and shape for a drone that is taking the sports world by storm.

The AirDog is the world’s first action sports drone that follows users automatically as they engage in their favorite extreme activities. The AirDog, equipped with a GoPro high-definition video camera, designed for taking video of fast-action outdoor sports, captures much more of the action than a regular video camera can, said Edgars Rozentals, co-founder and CEO of Helico Aerospace. “AirDog not only provides users with their own affordable and personal aerial video crew, but goes one step further in providing thrilling footage from distances and angles previously inaccessible to consumers,” Rozentals said.

Users strap on and activate a lightweight remote control device called the AirLeash, and the Airdog takes off, tracking users wherever they go and filming them from the air. The system works automatically, using sophisticated algorithms to take video from the best angles. The waterproof AirDog has a flight time of 10 to 20 minutes, depending on speed, and is capable of moving at up to 40 miles per hour (65 kilometers per hour). It has a range of up to 1,000 feet (300 meters), can operate up to nearly 10,000 feet (3,000 meters) above sea level, and weighs just four pounds (1.8 kilos) with a battery. It’s ideal, the company says, for any kind of action sports — biking, skateboarding, wakeboarding, surfing, skating, skiing, and more.

The project has proven wildly popular, raising over half a million dollars on Kickstarter in just two weeks. The company had sought just $200,000 in its one month fundraising window, hitting its original goal in just three days.

The AirDog is in beta production, and Helico has previewed its first all-3D printed system. Full production is set for November at a cost of about $1,500. Contributors on Kickstarter can pick one up for about $1,000.

“It took a year and countless caffeine-fueled hours that were spent hacking intelligent flight code algorithms,” said Rozentals. “The result is extremely intelligent, simple to use drone technology for every action sports enthusiast and movie maker out there. From its roots the AirDog was designed to serve and obey those pushing the boundaries in sports.”

Getting the AirDog in the air wasn’t so simple, Rozentals said. He originally tried to fabricate the parts for the AirDog in China, sending off plans of what he wanted and getting back samples two weeks later — all of which were too heavy. The extra weight slowed the drone or even prevented it from taking off.

Frustrated, Rozentals sought the counsel of Stratasys’ Latvian partner, Baltic3D, which worked with Polish reseller Bibus Menos to meet Rozentals’ requirements. The parts for both the AirDog and the AirLeash remote control device were eventually produced on Stratasys’ FDM and PolyJet 3D printers–the latter developed by Objet in Israel.

“The benefits delivered by 3D printing compared to the method we tried originally are numerous,” said Rozentals. “Above all, turnaround time is significantly reduced, and if we need to make last minute changes to a design, we can do so within a matter of hours, easily and cost-effectively. This was simply unachievable before, as it necessitated time-consuming production of a costly new mold.”

“AirDog is a perfect example of how 3D printing is an enabler for inventors looking to turn their ideas into fully operational parts quickly and effectively,” says Andy Middleton, Senior Vice President and General Manager EMEA at Stratasys. “In this case, both our core 3D printing technologies have proved instrumental in producing a fully functional drone and wrist device. With the exception of the advanced sensor technology, both parts have been created entirely using 3D printing.”

“I’m not sure how we would have arrived at the stage of having a functional part, were it not for Stratasys 3D printing technology,” said Rozentals. “I founded the company two years ago and we’re a staff of three, so for start-ups like Helico, this technology isn’t just a game-changer, but the ticket to the game itself.”



Thursday, July 17, 2014

The Top 10 Israeli Startups Changing The World Of Sports

Roaring crowds, fans decked out in national flags, nail-biting overtimes, unexpected twists and turns and hilarious Suarez and Howard memes. The 2014 World Cup is well under way, and while Israel may not be in the running for the glorious title, the Startup Nation sure does know a thing or two about winning sports fans over. In honor of the 2014 World Cup, NoCamels proudly presents the ten most cutting-edge Israeli companies re-inventing the world of competitive sports.
By Rachel Dinh, NoCamels

FTBPro

Kicking off our list is the world’s largest fan-generated soccer website, where anyone can sign up to become
a sports journalist, regardless of their level of experience. Founded in 2011 by four Israeli entrepreneurs, FTBpro currently has over 2,000 passionate “fan writers” who put together thousands of articles each month in nine languages for an audience of more than 10 million readers.

With the 2014 World Cup under way, FTBpro features almost 300 articles every day about the tournament written by fans, covering topics ranging from in-depth analyses of upcoming matches to lighthearted topics such as Top 10 lists of memes and tweets.


SmartCourt

Tennis legends Novak Djokovic and Billie Jean King are among investors who recently contributed $3.5
million for the global launch of Israeli company PlaySight’s SmartCourt, a tennis-analytic system designed to measure and record playing performance. SmartCourt provides 3D tactical, game management, information and holistic real-time statistics for tennis players to improve their skills.

SmartCourt also enhances the overall tennis-playing experience by making it digitally interactive and sharable via social media outlets. PlaySight’s recent investment will also further research in applying the SmartCourt technology to other kinds of other sports like basketball, soccer, and hockey. 

Monday, July 14, 2014

Wibbitz turns news articles into video clips so now you can’t say reading the news is boring

Wibbitz - The Israeli startup, which previously only had a mobile app, launched its tech as plugins for Chrome and Firefox. It mostly reads articles to users and shows pictures of important things
Aviva Gat , GeekTime

There is really no excuse for people who don’t read the news now. No more complaining that the text is small or getting bored after skimming the first paragraph of an article. As if readings the news wasn’t easy enough (come on people, we pretty much write at a seventh grade reading level), an Israeli company has
found a way to make it even easier by turning text articles into videos that highlight the important information.
While the technology used to be just for smartphones, the company, Wibbitz, on June 24 announced that its product, which is described as a “play button for the web,” is now available as a web browser plugin for Chrome and Firefox.

Wibbitz takes text-based articles and uses algorithms to analyze the text and extract interesting information and turn it into a highly engaging video format using Natural Language Processing technologies. With the touch of a button, articles become easily digestible videos made up of images, clips, info graphics and text-to-speech.

I tried using Wibbitz on Chrome on an article on Jpost.com, and the plugin generated videos of the articles I clicked on. The video basically just read the article out loud and showed pictures of important people, places and things mentioned in the article. Other videos I created sometimes showed relevant video content while reading the article. Wibbitz, however, cuts its videos at 40 seconds, so the video cuts off before finishing the article.

Turning articles into a broadcast
The technology has been available as a mobile application since last June and it generates 10,000 clips per day, according to a statement from Wibbitz. It converts news items into videos based on text taken from top online news publications that have partnered with Wibbitz.

The new web plugins initially supports close to 200 news feeds from major online news publishers, including Yahoo News, the New York Times, BBC, The Guardian and others. When users download the plugin, a play button icon appears in the browser’s address bar. If the button is blue, it means the page is supported by Wibbitz’s technology and the written body can be converted into a 40 second video. Wibbitz said one of the main advantages of its technology is that it allows publishers and brands to generate videos at a fraction of the cost and effort of traditional methods.

“We’ve created a technology that not just automates the process of video production at scale but is also contextually sensitive,” Zohar Dayan, Wibbitz’ co-founder & CEO said in a statement. “It is a video experience that adapts itself to the user depending on the device type, screen size, and orientation. We have big plans for our technology and in the future we will be able to add the button to platforms like smart TV, and even wearable devices.”

While I get it when it comes to mobile – no one likes reading long articles on a small screen – using Wibbitz in lieu of reading actual news online is just dumbing down the content and in no way could users truly understand issues by watching a 40 second clip the way readers can understand an issue by reading 500 words. However, if it just reads the article from the top until 40 seconds runs out, then at least the user will get the most important information in an article, and many people who best absorb information auditorily could benefit from this application. But if you are the kind of person who zones out when someone reads to you, you are better off reading the article yourself.


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Cybercrime Scheme (Boleto) Uncovered in Brazil

Security researchers have uncovered what they believe is a significant cybercrime operation in Brazil that took aim at $3.75 billion in transactions by Brazilians.
It is unclear what percentage of the $3.75 billion worth of compromised transactions was actually stolen. But if even half of that value was redirected to criminals, the scope of the swindle would eclipse any other previous electronic theft.

Nicole Perlroth ,NYtimes

The thieves preyed on Boleto Bancário, or Boletos, a popular Brazilian payment method that can be issued online and paid through various channels like banks and supermarkets, said researchers at the RSA Security division of the EMC Corporation.

Researchers said the ring had been using what they called bolware — a play on Boletos and malware, a term for software intended for illegitimate purposes — to intercept legitimate Boletos payments and redirect them to the accounts of criminals or mules, who are people paid to stand in for the criminals.


Boletos can be used for every kind of transaction, from telephone bills and health insurance premiums to mortgages and school tuition. Over six billion were issued last year, according to Brazil’s central bank. In a country where many lack bank accounts and do not trust the postal service enough to send checks by mail, it is common to see long lines at banks as Brazilians carry their Boletos to pay their bills


Bolware was first detected in 2012, but this is the first time that security researchers have been able to trace bolware to a single criminal ring and determine the scope of compromised transactions.

RSA researchers in Brazil, Israel and the United States studied 19 variants of bolware for three months. Using digital logs, they were able to trace the bolware to what they believe is one group in Brazil. Based on the logs, researchers determined that 192,227 victims had been affected and 495,793 Boletos transactions worth $3.75 billion were hit.

“Cybercrime is a lot more rampant in Brazil than it is in the United States, and in many ways Brazil has been the trendsetter in cybercrime,” said Avivah Litan, a cybersecurity analyst at Gartner.

Cybercrime accounts for 95 percent of losses incurred by Brazilian banks, according to the Brazilian Federation of Banks, or Febraban. Brazil also has a large online population — about 107 million people, or more than 50 percent of the country’s population — and in 2012 an estimated $1.4 billion was lost to electronic fraud, according to Febraban.

Now, researchers say Boletos fraud has become a serious threat to banks in Brazil. After briefing Febraban on RSA’s findings, Uri Fleyder, a researcher for RSA based in Israel, said in an interview Monday that while Boletos fraud was a known issue, “No one realized it was on this scope.”

Febraban officials said they could not comment on a continuing police investigation but noted that Brazilian banks last year spent $910 million on digital security and that they were encouraging consumers to migrate from Boletos to a more secure, fully electronic payment system called Direct Debit Authorization, or D.D.A.

Boletos are an enticing target because they are so common.

The criminals infected PCs by sending emails with malicious links and attachments that, once clicked, downloaded the bolware onto a computer. The bolware burrowed into the Windows operating system of a computer and worked through Internet browsers — including Google’s Chrome, Mozilla’s Firefox and Microsoft’s Internet Explorer — where it modified Boletos transactions and redirected payments directly to the accounts of criminals. The bolware also collected users’ email credentials, most likely so more malicious emails could be sent to infect more computers.

RSA researchers said they had also briefed the Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States Secret Service and were working with local and international law enforcement officials to help prosecute the individuals behind the ring. The current assumption is that the group has ties to organized crime in Brazil, but Mr. Fleyder cautioned that for now, that was just an assumption.

Because the bolware affects only Windows PC users, researchers are advising PC users to take extra precautions before clicking on suspicious links or email attachments and to make Boletos payments using only the digital wallets on their mobile devices.

But the best advice, Mr. Fleyder offered, was simply to “be vigilant.”

Monday, July 7, 2014

Tracense - Israeli nanotech innovation can ‘smell’ bombs,

An Israeli firm has developed the world’s first nanotech-based “electronic nose” to sniff out security threats like bombs, biological warfare agents, and toxic liquids. The developers say their new nose even outperforms dogs and will be available next year.
David Shanah  , The Time of Israel

The system, designed by Tel Aviv-based Tracense Systems, can detect even the smallest amounts of material, according to Dr. Ricardo Osiroff, the company’s CEO.
“Our ‘laboratory-on-a-chip’ nano-sensors can detect a wide range of chemical threats, such as explosives, chemical and biological warfare agents, in air, solid and liquid samples, at extremely low concentrations, unmatched by existing technologies,” said Osiroff. “Our system meets and beats the capabilities of dogs and
other animals.”

“Smell” is a manifestation of specific molecules, and each smell gives off its own specific chemical qualities. So detecting an odor is just a matter of figuring out which molecules are being “smelled” – no biggie for modern science. Several systems already do just that, using analytical chemistry-based equipment.

The problem is that those systems are generally too large and expensive to be deployed in the field, said Osiroff. Most of the equipment available, said Osiroff, besides being expensive and bulky, is “limited” to specific groups of smells, requires tedious sample collection procedures, and does not have enough sensitivity to detect small amounts of molecules. Turning it into an effective device that can be used practically by police, security officials, airport personnel, and others charged with public safety and security is the challenge.

That’s where Tracense’s innovations come in, said Osiroff. “Our proprietary inventions in the field of applied nano-technology allow us to develop arrays of hundreds of tiny sensors on a silicon chip to that mimic nature’s smelling sense, along with the software needed to analyze these tests. Nano sensors of unparalleled sensitivity are able to detect the most minute traces of chemicals, as low as a few molecules per 1,000 trillion, from air, liquid and particle samples with great reliability, ease of use and at low cost.” He did not quote a figure.

With its technology, Tracense is developing handheld devices that can be used in a wide variety of security scenarios – airports, mass transit stations, public buildings, trade flow, infrastructure, major events, malls, post offices, or in any other setting where the presence of dangerous materials is suspected. The system has been successfully tested on materials like TNT, RDX and HMX, along with peroxide-based explosives like TATP and HMTD.

Tracense nano-sensing technology was developed by a team of researchers led by Prof. Fernando Patolsky of the Chemistry Department and the Nanoscience Center of the Tel-Aviv University Exact Sciences Faculty, a top researcher in the field of nanotechnology and holder of more than 15 patents. Since 2007, Tracense has invested over $10M in R&D, and expects to go to market next year.

“Tracense is the first company in the world to overcome the hurdle of manufacturing a nano-sensor array with reliability, repeatability and at a reasonable cost,” said Osiroff. “Our technological achievements in the field of nanotechnology enable the fabrication of large silicon nanowire sensing arrays on a small semiconductor chip. Tracense sensors meet acute and ever-growing needs of the multibillion dollar market of threat detection for public safety, homeland security, and military uses.”




Friday, July 4, 2014

IBM's cybersecurity lab opens in Israel

Summary: The centre, a joint initiative between Big Blue and Ben Gurion University, has now been officially launched.
By Niv Lilien for Tel Aviv Tech


IBM is strengthening its ties with Israel, with the opening of a new security centre. Big Blue, which was one of the first tech companies to establish a presence in Israel back in 1972 with a research centre in Haifa, this month officially launched its new cybersecurity excellence centre in conjunction with Ben Gurion University, located at Be'er Sheva, in southern Israel.

The recently-launched centre will specialise in security and protection of critical infrastructures and data in future frameworks — including cloud storage, mobile devices, and Internet of Things.

Dr Yaron Wolfsthal, formerly a senior manager of system technologies and services at IBM's Haifa research lab, will head up the new centre — IBM's 26th security lab worldwide.
According to IBM, Wolfsthal has significant experience in leading international research teams and software development ventures.

Professor Rivka Carmi, president of Ben Gurion University, said at the opening ceremony that the university will be working with IBM and its security expertise "to create a framework of activities that will benefit from the university's research capabilities". The university will be able to expand its research efforts through the cooperation with IBM, she said.

According to Rick Kaplan, CEO of IBM Israel, IBM shares Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's goal of turning Be'er Sheva and the Negev region in southern Israel into a world-class centre for cybersecurity. The new centre and the co-operation with Ben Gurion University will allow IBM to expand its security capabilities not just in Israel but worldwide. IBM currently employees more than 1,000 workers in Israel in three research centres, and last year bought the Israeli security firm Trusteer.
IBM acquired the endpoint security company for what's thought to be around $1bn.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Google tests Loon in the Brazilian northeast

Summary: The internet-enabled balloons were launched in two cities in the state of Piauí
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech

Google has sent its internet-enabled balloons into the stratosphere in the northeastern state of Piauí today (6) as part of its partnership with the Brazilian government to connect remote areas of the country.

Five balloons were launched as part of the experiment in the state capital, Teresina, and close to the Equator. According to Google Brazil president Fabio Coelho, the geographic positioning of the state, as well as its current dry season influenced the location choice.


The five balloons will be floating in the stratosphere for about 100 days, according to Coelho. Today's event follows a previous experiment last month, also in Piauí, when two balloons were launched and one of them provided internet access to a school in the north of the state for about an hour.

Communications minister Paulo Bernardo attended the launch and mentioned that launching the balloons in Piauí was a request from his office, since only 27 percent households in the northeastern state of just over three million people have access to the internet.

Talks between the Brazilian government and Google around using the company's internet-enabled balloons started lin October last year, at the same time the government announced its own plans to use the equipment to take internet access to remote areas of the country.

At the time, minister Bernardo said that he asked the internet giant to produce equipment that could be tested in early 2014 and picked senior officials in the Ministry of Telecommunications and state-owned telco Telebrás to work on the potential partnership.

It is understood that the governmental internet-powered balloons was an idea championed by the former president of Telebrás, Caio Bonilha. Since the executive stepped down in January, it appears that the Google partnership has progressed a lot further.