New delete option when using Google Sync on iOS devices

With Google Sync for iOS, the default setting when you delete email in your iOS Mail app is that Gmail will archive the message and not delete it.

A new option “Delete Email As Trash” is now available. When you Enable “Delete Email As Trash” for this device, pressing Delete in your iOS Mail app will delete that email from your device and send it to your Gmail Trash.

Finally!

My biggest complaint with using Gmail with an external client (eg Mail on an iPhone) is that delete doesn’t really delete – it archives. I don’t want it to archive, I want it to delete!

Sure, using the Gmail app or the browser view works around this, but that really doesn’t solve the problem.

Now, finally, you can configure the action from the Google Sync settings page on your mobile device.

Posted via email from Richii

Japanese boffins fear virus nicked spacecraft blueprints • The Register

The attack on JAXA follows a run of similar cyber-assaults against the Japanese government and industrial giants. Last September Mitsubishi Heavy Industries acknowledged that it had become the victim of the most high-profile of these cyber-attacks. The Japanese parliament confirmed it had been hit by another assault in October. Both attacks were blamed on Chinese hackers.

Any essential part of any threat mitigation strategy is detection and containment: If a system is compromised, how do you detect it? How do you stop internal data from being taken?

Being able to detect – and stop – malicious agents from communicating with C&C servers is an essential part of the security posture.

Posted via email from Richii

Happy New Year!

2011 is rapidly drawing to a close, so let’s see if I can get this
posted in the next two minutes!

To all our friends and family, across Australia and around the world,
we hope you have a great new year, and a wonderful 2012.

And to the people next door – you let the fireworks off early!

Posted via email from Richii

Apple needs to change Apple ID

Many years ago I got my first iPod. Actually, it was a raffle prize. Anyway, thanks to that, and then when the iTunes Store was launched in Australia, I ended up creating an Apple ID.

Over the years that same Apple ID was used for a few additional iPods of various flavours, a couple of Macs, and some iPhones. It’s all been fine, until now. iOS 5 has really brought to a head some crucial shortcomings in the current system.

How it _used_ to work was pretty simple. You create an account with Apple, and you use that account to register hardware you buy, as well as make purchases from Apple’s online store, iTunes, and the iOS App Store (and now the Mac App Store). While iTunes music is no longer encrypted, video is. iOS apps are likewise copy protected. I’m not super concerned about the DRM issues, as I’ve got pretty good backups, and the whole concept allows the apps / media to be copied to multiple devices.

Having a single account also made the little extra services simple, like a single login for the “Find my iPhone” service.

Then came along iOS 5, and the new features such as iCloud and iMessage. All of a sudden I’m faced with two other people in my family getting my documents and messages on their phones.

Now, it’s true that iOS does allow you to use different accounts for certain things. For example, my apps and media are still purchased using the original account that we’ve had for years. Now, however, we each have a seperate account for use with iMessage and iCloud. And this does work.

So, what’s the problem?

For starters, there’s no way to mix and match which iCloud services belong to which account. It’s all or nothing. This is a pain because I’d like to have some parts connected to the “master” account (eg Find my iPhone, Photo Stream) for all to share, but keep other parts (Documents, Contacts, Mail) linked to the private accounts.

This is exacerbated by the Mac / Windows side of iCloud. You can only sign in to one account. On the surface this makes sense – it’s my computer, so I sign into my account. But I have now have three mobile devices using unique accounts for Photo Stream – how do I get all of them to save their pictures back to the computer?

What we need here is the ability to have a heirarchy of accounts. Create a master account that is used for purchasing, etc. Link the individual accounts as children. You could even have a little control panel that allows you to enforce various settings such as parental control over the sub-accounts.

Then, allow me to have a master feed for things like Photo Stream – if opted in, include the photos from the child accounts in the stream.

Take it even further, and have a definable purchase limit on the child accounts. That way I could let my daughter buy her own apps and music, but with a pre-set limit per week, month, whatever. On the back end the purchase is actually made against the master account.

The original system was fine when all it was used for was purchasing content. Now that the Apple ID is used for much more they need to revisit how it works, and give more flexibility and control to the end users.

Posted via email from Richii

Fake ATO phishing emails

I was lucky enough to get two slightly different phishing emails overnight, both pretending to come from the Australian Tax Office. I haven’t seen these ones before – I usually only get them from the banks!

Email one:

From: donotreply@ato.gov.au
Subject: Mistakes in your tax form NAT3799

To whom it may concern.

Please be informed that you have made mistakes while filling out the last NAT3799 tax return (ID: 843494814049) .

Please follow the advice of our tax specialists HERE

We prompt you to correct the mistakes and file the revised tax return to your local tax office as soon as possible.

Sincerely,

************************************* 

The word “HERE” is hyperlinked to hxxp://sandbox.codewerken.com/27bddd/index.html. This page is still alive at the time of writing, and loads hxxp://searchdiscovered.com in an iframe. A quick look at hxxp://sandbox.codewerken.com shows a few other directories with random six character names that contain similar content. The server seems to be Apache with some FrontPage extensions.

The ATO logo is hosted from hxxp://www.grantsspectrum.com.au/images/ato.jpg.

The source address was 80.224.55.227, which resolves to user-55-227.wipzona.es.

Email two:

From: Australian Government <centenarians37@ato.gov.au>
Subject: Your tax return was incorrectly filled out

Attention: to whom it may concern

We are sorry to inform you that you incorrectly completed the most recent tax form NAT3799 (ID: 107442005751) .

Please find the advice of our tax specialists HERE

We kindly ask you to amend the mistakes and send the corrected tax return to your local tax office as soon as possible.

Yours sincerely,

Leonel Stafford

This time, the word “HERE” is hyperlinked to hxxp://denverdm.com/a0ec15/index.html. The logo is embedded inline, rather than being hyperlinked. This page has been removed.

The source address was 31.52.158.162, host31-52-158-162.range31-52.btcentralplus.com.

Posted via email from Richii