Archive for Internet

Surprise: The Internet hates rich people

Heres a rant from one financial analyst, spotted by Time.com, which shares a parent company with CNN and authored a recent post called Sick of hearing about Facebook? Youre not alone.

But do I really need to see another article about how the Ferrari dealers in Silicon Valley have brought in extra inventory in anticipation of all the new millionaires? Or how Menlo Park and Palo Alto housing prices, which were already sky-high, are soaring even higher from all the new money? the analyst, Tracey Ryniec, wrote.

I cant wait for this week to be over so we can talk about some other companies.

Some of the venom online was directed at the Winklevoss twins, those rowing-happy Harvard kids who repeatedly have been suing for part of Facebook.

Dubbed the Winklevii in the film The Social Network, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss are set to make millions off of Facebooks IPO despite the fact that some courts have rejected their claims that Zuckerberg stole their idea for his blockbuster website. They could make $228 million for their 6 million shares in the company, according to a CNNMoney gallery on Facebooks new billionaires.

At The New Yorker, Silvia Killingsworth writes that we all should give the Winklevii a bit of a break — especially since theyve been good sports about their anti-fame:

Sure, the Winklevii may sound a little cheesy finishing each others sentences — a well-enunciated mix of locker-room pep talk and well-worn entrepreneurial Web-2.0 jargon — and they will be subject to Al Gore-style Internet-invention jokes until the end of time. But whod have known theyd be such good sportsmen about it? In the movie, Cameron gets frustrated at one point and hollers. Screw it! Lets gut the frigging nerd! In real life, the twins seem to have become entirely content with chasing the nerd around the courts, and collecting their cut of the biggest tech IPO. in history.

Others are teasing CEO Mark Zuckerberg himself.

The comedian Andy Borowitz posted a fake letter from the 28-year-old to potential investors. It opens:

For years, youve wasted your time on Facebook. Now heres your chance to waste your money on it, too.

It ends like this:

One last thing: what will, I, Mark Zuckerberg, do with the $18 billion Im expected to earn from Facebooks IPO? Well, Im considering buying Greece, but that would still leave me with $18 billion. LOL. Friend me, Mark

Alltopics.com Offers Top News on Internet

As of today Alltopics.com puts Internet in a whole new light on its website, which has technology articles for instant access, gathered from all over the World Wide Web. Alltopics.com is a news and information giant, collecting and rating every newsworthy story on Internet.

(PRWEB) May 19, 2012

Internet section is now available on Alltopics. Internet.alltopics.com is a vital source for anybody out there being tech freak, or wanting to know more about the latest deals, issues and news on the world wide web. Whether the reader is an Internet buff, or an average teenager, neither one of those guys can afford to be without the incredible source of news, videos and images avaliable on Alltopics.com.

New categories avaliable on Alltopics. Alltopics has gathered all current Internet advances, ideas, news stories and visuals, all in one big category. New sources are being constantly added to the website. Alltopics searches the whole World Wide Web, including Twitter, Facebook and Google, as the website captures the stories rated for popularity.

Internet becomes a major category on Alltopics. All the reader has to do is log in to the website under internet to find the abundance of articles and breaking Internet news. What is the phenomenon of social media? How dangerous can Internet be? What is the major Internet advantage? The answers to these and many more technological questions are waiting to be revealed on Internet.alltopics.com.

Browsing with alltopics is quick and easy. After logging in and browsing the reader will encounter more articles about the topics of ones interest without wasting time on laborious search.The user has instant and free access to any of the current information about new inventions, new apps, updates on technological devices, and hundreds of other topics. If its good and people like it, Alltopics has it.

Alltopics.com is the one place where all the search is taking place and everything is possible, as the website takes the readers on a tour of every great new Internet news out there. And the topics are always changing, with the latest and most popular links, all guaranteed by Alltopics.com. It doesnt get more sophisticated than Alltopics.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/5/prweb9522058.htm

Total Defense Internet Security Suite Wins Best Anti-Malware, Anti-Virus and …

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Mar 07, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) –
Total Defense, Inc., a leading provider of anti-malware detection and
anti-crimeware solutions, today announced that Info
Security Products Guide has named Internet Security Suite a winner of
the 8th Annual 2012 Global Excellence Awards in the Anti-Malware,
Anti-Virus and Anti-Spam Software category.

Total Defense Internet Security Suite provides easy-to-use,
comprehensive protection against viruses, malware, spyware, spam,
inappropriate content, lost files, and data corruption. Recently, Total
Defense integrated mobile security into the software to protect
smartphones and tablets against viruses and spyware.

The coveted annual Info Security’s Global Product Excellence program
recognizes security and IT vendors with advanced, ground-breaking
products and solutions that are helping set the bar higher for others in
all areas of technologies. More than 50 judges from a broad spectrum of
industry voices from around the world participated and their average
scores determined the winners.

“Having Total Defense Internet Security Suite recognized as the category
leader in anti-malware and anti-virus software by Info Security Products
Guide is great validation for us as we strive to deliver market-leading,
robust security solutions,” said Chris Hickey, president at Total
Defense.

About Info Security Products Guide

Info Security Products Guide sponsors leading conferences and expos
worldwide and plays a vital role in keeping end-users informed of the
choices they can make when it comes to protecting their digital
resources. It is written expressly for those who are adamant on staying
informed of security threats and the preventive measure they can take.
You will discover a wealth of information in this guide including
tomorrow’s technology today, best deployment scenarios, people and
technologies shaping info security and market research that facilitate
in making the most pertinent security decisions. The Info Security
Products Guide Awards recognize and honor excellence in all areas of
information security. To learn more, visit
www.infosecurityproductsguide.com
and stay secured.

About Total Defense

Total Defense is a global leader in malware detection and anti-crimeware
solutions. Over 50,000 businesses across a wide spectrum of industries
have deployed the Company’s solutions, including some of the most
sophisticated buyers of security technology worldwide, and over four
million consumers worldwide use Total Defense’s products. The Company’s
solutions include anti-malware, anti-virus, parental controls, intrusion
prevention, mobile security, online back-up and PC optimization. Total
Defense is a former business of CA Technologies, one of the largest
software companies in the world, and has operations in New York,
California, Europe and Asia.

For more information, please visit
www.totaldefense.com .

SOURCE: Total Defense, Inc.

Gutenberg Communications for Total Defense
Susie Hayne, 408-827-4360
Susie@gutenbergpr.com
or
Stefanie Cannon, 408-827-4361
Stefanie@gutenbergpr.com

Copyright Business Wire 2012

HomeAway Announces Participation at the Barclays Capital Internet Connect …

AUSTIN, Texas, Mar 7, 2012 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) –
HomeAway, Inc.

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, the world’s largest online marketplace for the vacation rental industry, today announced HomeAway(R) CFO, Lynn Atchison, will participate in the Barclays Capital Internet Connect Conference to be held March 13, 2012 at the Crowne Plaza Times Square Manhattan Hotel in New York City. HomeAway’s presentation is scheduled for Tuesday, March 13, 2012 at 8:40 a.m. EDT. The presentation will be webcast live on the Internet, accessible through the Investor Relations section of HomeAway’s website at
http://investors.homeaway.com and archived online for 30 days.

About HomeAway

HomeAway, Inc., based in Austin, Texas, is the worldwide leader in online vacation rentals, with sites representing more than 640,000 paid vacation rental home listings throughout 168 countries. HomeAway offers an extensive selection of vacation homes that provide travelers with memorable experiences and benefits, including more room to relax and added privacy, for less than the cost of traditional hotel accommodations. The company also makes it easy for vacation rental owners and property managers to advertise their properties and manage bookings online. The HomeAway portfolio includes the leading vacation rental websites HomeAway.com, VRBO.com and VacationRentals.com in the United States; HomeAway.co.uk and OwnersDirect.co.uk in the United Kingdom; HomeAway.de in Germany; Abritel.fr and Homelidays.com in France; HomeAway.es in Spain; AlugueTemporada.com.br in Brazil; and HomeAway.com.au in Australia.

In addition, HomeAway operates BedandBreakfast.com, the most comprehensive global site for finding bed-and-breakfast properties, providing travelers with another source for unique lodging alternatives to chain hotels. For more information about HomeAway, please visit
www.HomeAway.com .

This news release was distributed by GlobeNewswire,
www.globenewswire.com

SOURCE: HomeAway Inc.

CONTACT: HomeAway Investor Relations Contact:
HomeAway Investor Relations
(512) 505-1700
investors@homeaway.com
or Addo Communications at (310) 829-5400
Media Contact:
Eileen Buesing
Senior Director of Global Public Relations, HomeAway, Inc.
(512) 493-0375
ebuesing@homeaway.com

(C) Copyright 2010 GlobeNewswire, Inc. All rights reserved.

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March 23, 2012 4:00p

Avoid Internet Doomsday: Check for DNSChanger Malware Now

A federal judge has given users infected with DNSChanger a four-month extension to get clean.

The FBI-controlled DNS servers that replaced the malicious servers will not shut down on March 8 as previously announced. But nearly half a million computers are still at risk for losing Internet connectivity when the new deadline rolls around in July.

Back in November, law enforcement authorities working with the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested six of the seven individuals in Estonia responsible for infecting millions of Windows and Mac machines worldwide with the DNSChanger Trojan. As part of the Operation Ghost Click raid, FBI agents also seized over 100 servers at data centers throughout the United States masquerading as legitimate DNS servers.

The DNSChanger malware replaced the Domain Name System settings for the computers and routers it infected with addresses of malicious servers. When users tried to access certain websites, the rogue DNS servers redirected the Web traffic through other servers controlled by the criminals. Those criminals pocketed millions of dollars in affiliate and referral fees by diverting users through those sites, according to the FBI.

Users who found themselves landing on strange sites unexpectedly, or had home computers that had difficulty connecting to their work VPNs were likely to be infected.

Interim Measures
Since machines with modified DNS settings would be unable to access the Internet once the rogue servers went dark, the FBI obtained a court order that allowed the non-profit Internet Systems Consortium to set up alternate DNS servers to temporarily replace the malicious servers. These servers were intended to give people time to clean up the infection. The court order was originally set to expire March 8, but prosecutors filed for an extension with the US Court in the Southern District of New York because a significant number of computers still remained infected.

In early February, Internet Identity estimated about 400,000 computers in the US of the initial million were still infected. At least 94 of all Fortune 500 companies and three out of 55 major government entities had at least one computer or router that was infected with DNSChanger as of Feb. 23, according to IID. Updated numbers are currently unavailable.

The new deadline for getting cleaned up and averting the Internet blackout is now July 9. Users should immediately check their computers if they havent already done so.

How to Save Your Connection

While the DNS Changer Working Group has provided step-by-step instructions for Windows XP, Mac OS X, and Windows 7 machines to check for an infection, a number of services and tools have popped up to make detection a fairly straightforward process.

The DNSChanger Eye Chart is one such tool. If the user on an infected computer goes to the site, the image on the page is displayed with a red background. If the machine is clean, the image has a green background. The eye chart will also show a red image if the home router is infected, even if the computer itself is clean.

Avira released a free tool for Windows systems that detects whether the computer is configured to use one of the temporary DNS servers. Despite the name, however, the Avira DNS Repair Tool is just a diagnostic tool and wont be able to remove the Trojan if it exists.

The FBI also has a lookup form on its website. The user can type in the IP address of the DNS server configured on the machine to find out if it is one of the malicious ones identified by law enforcement authorities.

Removing DNSChanger
Once the infection has been found, the next step is to remove it. Because DNSChanger is a rootkit, removing it not as simple as running an antivirus. One option is to reinstall the operating system and start over from scratch. Kaspersky Lab offers TDSSKiller, a rootkit removal tool, which can also detect DNSChanger and remove it from infected systems.

Some ISPs, such as Comcast, are offering $100+ services to remove the infection for their customers. Concerned users should reach out to their ISPs for similar services.

The government does not expect average users to clean up their systems, however.

Users who believe their computers may be infected should contact a computer professional, to remove the Trojan, the FBI recommended in its working paper. If you discover that your system is among the nearly half a million infected systems and doubt your own ability to clean it up, DCWG has links to organizations that can help with DNSChanger removal on its website.

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

Kansas Department of Transportation to Sell Tractors, Trucks, Other Surplus …

MANHATTAN, KS, Mar 07, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) is liquidating more
than 560 surplus assets — including backhoes, tractors, pickup
trucks and dump trucks, among others. Manhattan-based Purple Wave
Auction is selling the items in an Internet auction that ends at 10
a.m. Tuesday, March 13. Bidding is currently under way at
purplewave.com.

“Bidders can view photos of each asset, read a detailed description,
and learn about personal inspection opportunities on our auction
website. After the auction, the final prices are published. This
transparency gives people the confidence to bid,” said Jerrod
Westfahl, chief executive officer.

The auction will include at least 92 pickup trucks, 32 dump trucks,
19 tractors, and scores of other pieces of machinery previously used
for state road construction and maintenance.

“All items are selling where they sit, so KDOT doesn’t have to spend
taxpayer dollars transporting items to and from an auction site,”
said Westfahl. “This also adds to the convenience for bidders around
the state, who can inspect items in their area without traveling to a
central location.”

Items are on display in Norton/Almena, Chanute, Garden City,
Hutchinson, Salina, Topeka and Ulysses. Details on exact items and
locations are available at purplewave.com, where individuals may also
place bids.

Purple Wave currently delivers complete auction services as the on
call service provider for all state agencies, school districts,
townships, counties, cities and others. “It’s a true honor to serve
the Kansas taxpayers. As we have demonstrated the effectiveness of
our auction services, we have had opportunities to provide similar
services to agencies in Iowa, Missouri and other states,” said
Westfahl.

ABOUT PURPLE WAVE AUCTION Established in 2000 and headquartered in
Manhattan, Purple Wave is the easiest, most straightforward way to
sell used equipment. As a pioneer of Internet-based auctions, Purple
Wave operates as a full-service seller agent to remarket
agricultural, construction, industrial and fleet assets through
unreserved public auctions. For more information, visit

www.purplewave.com .

For more information:
Carl Carter
205-823-3273

SOURCE: Purple Wave

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Broadview Networks Receives 2011 INTERNET TELEPHONY Product of the Year Award

RYE BROOK, N.Y., Mar 07, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) –
Broadview Networks, a leading provider of hosted voice, data and cloud
computing solutions, announced today that TMC,
a global, integrated media company, has named OfficeSuite(R) Automatic
Call Distribution (ACD) as a recipient of the 2011 INTERNET
TELEPHONY Product of the Year Award.

OfficeSuite(R)
ACD is a fully featured hosted application that is integrated with OfficeSuite(R),
Broadview’s award-winning cloud-based IP phone solution. OfficeSuite(R)
ACD provides robust call center capabilities for business customers,
including advanced call routing, queuing, call recording, out-of-the-box
reporting, and dashboard functionality.

OfficeSuite(R) ACD delivers the advanced call center features of a PBX or
standalone ACD without the need to invest capital in onsite equipment or
intensive IT support. It is easily managed “in the cloud” and
administered without extensive training from anywhere via a web browser.
It provides a suite of highly flexible capabilities that enable quick
and easy prioritization and distribution of incoming business calls,
customized hold treatments and advanced routing options that factor in
call agents’ skills, location, experience and other parameters.

“We are honored to receive a 2011 Product of the Year Award from INTERNET
TELEPHONY magazine,” said Jeff Blackey, senior vice president of
marketing for Broadview Networks. “OfficeSuite is just one of the ways
Broadview is making it easier for SMBs to run their businesses. We’ve
incorporated powerful enterprise-grade features into our hosted call
center and recording solution and made them available to SMBs–without
the need for any new investment in equipment or additional IT resources.
Whether for three or 300 users, Broadview’s cloud-based ACD is an
affordable and easy-to-use solution.”

“I am happy to grant Broadview Networks with a Product of the Year
Award. The editors of INTERNET TELEPHONY have verified that
OfficeSuite(R) Automatic Call Distribution displays quality and innovation
plus provides real solutions in the marketplace,” stated Rich
Tehrani, chief executive officer of TMC. “I would like to
congratulate the entire team at Broadview Networks for their commitment
to advancing IP communication technologies.”

2011 Product of the Year winners are published in INTERNET TELEPHONY
magazine, (
www.itmag.com ).
INTERNET TELEPHONY has been the authority in IP communication
since 1998(TM).

About INTERNET TELEPHONY magazine

INTERNET TELEPHONY has been the IP Communications Authority since
1998(TM). Beginning with the first issue in February of 1998, INTERNET
TELEPHONY magazine has been providing unbiased views of the
complicated converged communications space. For more information, please
visit
www.itmag.com .

About TMC (
www.tmcnet.com )

TMC is a global, integrated media company that helps clients build
communities in print, in person, and online. TMC publishes the Customer
Interaction Solutions, INTERNET
TELEPHONY, Next
Gen Mobility and Cloud
Computing (formerly InfoTECH Spotlight) magazines. TMCnet.com,
which is read by two million unique visitors each month, is the leading
source of news and articles for the communications and technology
industries. TMC is the producer of ITEXPO,
the world’s leading B2B communications event. In addition, TMC runs
multiple industry events: 4G Wireless Evolution; M2M Evolution; Cloud
Communications Expo; SIP Tutorial 2.0:Bringing SIP to the Web; Business
Video Expo; Regulatory 2.0 Workshop; DevCon5; HTML5 Summit; CVx;
AstriCon; StartupCamp; MSPAlliance MSPWorld and more.

About Broadview Networks (
www.broadviewnet.com )

Broadview is a network-based business communications provider serving
customers nationwide with local and long-distance voice and data
communications, premises-based and patented hosted VoIP systems, data
services and a full suite of managed services and a range of
professional services. They also provide an innovative portfolio of
bundled, hosted IP phone and cloud computing services designed to meet
the unique application requirements of diverse workforce groups. Its
customers benefit from award-winning customer service, including a
web-based account management tool and a primary point-of-contact for
real-time, personal customer care.

Broadview is a control investment of MCG Capital Corporation

/quotes/zigman/86865/quotes/nls/mcgc MCGC
+1.41%



. Its other large investors include Baker Capital and New
Enterprise Associates.

SOURCE: Broadview Networks

Broadview Networks
Russ Fordyce
Managing Director, Marketing
914-922-7900
rfordyce@broadviewnet.com

Copyright Business Wire 2012

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MCGC

MCG Capital Corp.


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Volume: 577,950
March 9, 2012 5:00p

Pakistan Builds Web Wall Out in the Open


PARIS — Many countries censor the Internet, but few spell out their intentions as explicitly as Pakistan.

Enlarge This Image





Asif Hassan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A Net cafe in Karachi, Pakistan, where censorship is common.

In an effort to tighten its control over the Internet, the government recently published a public tender for the “development, deployment and operation of a national-level URL filtering and blocking system.”

Technology companies, academic institutions and other interested parties have until March 16 to submit proposals for the $10 million project, but anger about it has been growing both inside and outside Pakistan.

Censorship of the Web is nothing new in Pakistan, which, like other countries in the region, says it wants to uphold public morality, protect national security or prevent blasphemy. The government has blocked access to pornographic sites, as well as, from time to time, mainstream services like Facebook and YouTube.

Until now, however, Pakistan has done so in a makeshift way, demanding that Internet service providers cut off access to specific sites upon request. With Internet use growing rapidly, the censors are struggling to keep up, so the government wants to build an automatic blocking and filtering system, like the so-called Great Firewall of China.

While China and other governments that sanitize the Internet generally do so with little public disclosure, Pakistan is being surprisingly forthcoming about its censorship needs. It published its request for proposals on the Web site of the Information and Communications Technology Ministry’s Research and Development Fund and even took out newspaper advertisements to publicize the project.

“The system would have a central database of undesirable URL’s that would be loaded on the distributed hardware boxes at each POP and updated on daily basis,” the request for proposals says, referring to uniform resource locators, the unique addresses for specific Web pages, and points of presence, or access points.

“The database would be regularly updated through subscription to an international reputed company maintaining and updating such databases,” according to the request, which was published last month.

The tender details a number of technical specifications, including the fact that the technology “should be able to handle a block list of up to 50 million URL’s (concurrent unidirectional filtering capacity) with processing delay of not more than 1 milliseconds.”

Following the Arab Spring, which demonstrated the power of the Internet to help spread political and social change, Pakistan’s move to clamp down has set off a storm of protest among free-speech groups in the country and beyond.

Opponents of censorship say they are doubly appalled because they associated this kind of heavy-handed approach more with the previous regime of Gen. Pervez Musharraf than with the current government of President Asif Ali Zardari.

“The authorities here are big fans of China and how it filters the Internet,” said Sana Saleem, chief executive of Bolo Bhi, a group that campaigns against restrictions on the Internet. “They overlook the fact that China is an autocratic regime and we are a democracy.”

“What makes this kind of censorship so insidious is that they always use national security, pornography or blasphemy as an explanation for blocking other kinds of speech,” Ms. Saleem said, adding that her site had been blocked for several months in 2010 when it made reference to a ban on Facebook. Access to the social networking service had been restricted because of a page featuring a competition to draw the prophet Mohammed — something that is considered blasphemous by Muslims.

The Technology Ministry’s Research and Development Fund says in its tender that the Internet filtering and blocking system will be “indigenously developed,” but campaigners like Ms. Saleem say they think it is likely the agency will try to adapt Western technology for the purpose.

To try to prevent this from happening, Ms. Saleem wrote to the chief executives of eight international companies that make Net filtering technology, asking them to make a public commitment not to apply for the Pakistani grant.

On Friday, one of them, Websense, which is based in San Diego, responded, declaring in a statement on its Web site that it would not seek the contract.

“Broad government censorship of citizen access to the Internet is morally wrong,” Websense said. “We further believe that any company whose products are currently being used for government-imposed censorship should remove their technology so that it is not used in this way by oppressive governments.”

Websense had previously withdrawn the use of its technology from Yemen after facing accusations from the OpenNet Initiative, a U.S.-Canadian academic group, and other organizations that it had been used by the government of that country to stifle political expression on the Internet.

Governments around the world buy filtering and blocking technology to root out illegal content like child pornography. Some private companies employ it to restrict access to social networks and other distractions on company computers.

But the use of Western technology to rein in political speech in countries with repressive regimes has come under increasing scrutiny since the Arab Spring. The OpenNet Initiative said in a report last year that at least nine governments in the Middle East or North Africa had used such products, with the Western companies maintaining lists of sites to be blocked, including sites featuring skeptical views of Islam and even dating services.

Even before implementing its new system, Pakistan has been an active censor. The country was 151st, out of 179, on a ranking of media freedom by the Paris-based group Reporters Without Borders in 2011.

“Reporters Without Borders urges you to abandon this project, which would reinforce the arsenal of measures for communications surveillance and Internet censorship that have already been put in place by your government,” the group wrote in a letter Friday to Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani.

To free-speech advocates in Pakistan, the government’s seeming insouciance about censorship is a particular cause for alarm.

“This is a case study,” said Ms. Saleem of Bolo Bhi, which is based in Karachi and whose name means “speak up.” “No government has ever done this so publicly.”

Internet Brands Acquires Mobile App Creator Forum Runner

LOS ANGELES, CA, Mar 07, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
Internet Brands today announced the acquisition of Forum Runner
(
www.forumrunner.net ), a mobile application that allows forum users
to interact with online communities from mobile devices. Forum Runner
will operate as part of Internet Brands’ vBulletin software division.

“Mobile is no longer the future; it’s the present,” said John
McGanty, general manager of vBulletin. “It’s imperative for online
forums to offer a good mobile user experience as they experience
explosive growth in usage from mobile devices. Forum Runner gives
forum sites an easy way of providing native iOS and Android mobile
apps to their users.”

Forum Runner is free to forum owners and very simple to install. It
provides native iOS and Android mobile applications to forum users.
Native mobile applications provide a number of advantages over
accessing a forum using a mobile browser, including:

— Mobile-Optimized – Forum Runner displays forum content in a manner
optimized for the smaller screens of mobile devices, providing major
improvements in navigation and readability.
— Greater Speed – Forum Runner native apps streamline page rendering,
providing a faster user experience.
— Better Engagement – Through the use of push notifications, users can
be alerted whenever particular forums or threads are updated, drawing
them back to a site.
— Photo Uploads – Forum Runner streamlines the posting of photos to a
forum.

Forum Runner supports websites running a variety of forum software
options including vBulletin. Support for all platforms will continue
going forward, and Forum Runner will continue to publish and support
its paid, customized branded versions of its applications.

ForumRunner can be downloaded and installed at
www.forumrunner.net .
It is compatible with vBulletin version 3.6 and above. Forum Runner
sign-up and account management are built directly into the vBulletin
Administrator Control Panel starting with vBulletin version 4.1.12.

Forum Runner bolsters vBulletin's mobile product offerings, providing
an entry-level native mobile app alternative to vBulletin's premium,
fully customized mobile solution, vBulletin Mobile Suite
(
www.vbulletin.com/mobile ).

About vBulletin

vBulletin (
www.vbulletin.com ) is the world leader in forum and
community publishing software. Customers have created vibrant
communities for over 10 years on vBulletin's stable and mature
platform. Developed with security, powerful administration features
and speed in mind, it serves over 70,000 online communities with an
international team. vBulletin is a division of Internet Brands, Inc.

Contact vBulletin:
Joe Ewaskiw
Internet Brands Inc. / vBulletin Solutions
(310) 280-4539
joe.ewaskiw@internetbrands.com

SOURCE: Internet Brands, Inc.

mailto:joe.ewaskiw@internetbrands.com

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Damaged Ocean Cable Cripples Internet In East Africa

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March 1, 2012

In East Africa, the Internet has slowed to a crawl thanks to a disruption of the telecommunications pipeline serving the region. Over the weekend, a ship dragging an anchor severed one of the three undersea data cables linking countries that include Kenya, Rwanda and Ethiopia to the Middle East and Europe. It may take about three weeks to fix. Audie Cornish talks to Solomon Moore, East Africa correspondent for the Wall Street Journal.

Copyright © 2012 National Public Radio®. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

In East Africa, Internet and telecommunications services have hit a snag – literally. A few days ago, a ship dragging its anchor severed an underwater fiber-optic cable carrying data from Kenya to United Arab Emirates. The result: Internet and mobile phone outages for people in more than half a dozen countries up and down the coast. And it’s not the first time one of these data pipelines has taken a hit. Here to talk more about the incident and the underwater world of data is Solomon Moore. He’s the East Africa correspondent for the Wall Street Journal. He’s based in Nairobi. Welcome to the program.

SOLOMON MOORE: Thank you.

CORNISH: What more can you tell us about what happened here?

MOORE: Kenyan officials say that a ship was dragging its anchor off the coast of Mombasa, Kenya, and severed an Internet and phone link that hits land at that point and then goes under the sea and connects Africa to the rest of the world via Internet and phone.

CORNISH: And I gather that this isn’t the first time.

MOORE: This isn’t the first time that a cable such as this has been cut, but what is unusual about this situation is that this particular cable – it’s called the TEAMS cable. It’s The East African Marine Systems. Internet traffic and phone traffic was being rerouted through this line because, 10 days earlier on February 17th, three other crucial cables were also severed in a different place off the coast of Djibouti.

CORNISH: This cable was just a few years old, but there are all kinds like it all over the world connecting places, you know, as far as New York and France, Colombia and Florida. Describe how these pipelines work, maybe what they look like.

MOORE: So these are not the kinds of cables that you’d see kind of lining the road. These are undersea cables. They’re coiled in kind of a steel armor. They’re fiber optic, each strand of fiber optic wire about the diameter of a human hair, and they’re capable of carrying millions of phone calls and data connections at once.

And they’re unspooled by cable ships across the ocean floor. The depth of these cables is the main thing that protects them, but also the armor that they’re sheathed in.

CORNISH: Solomon, how has this affected life there? I mean, it seems to somehow showcase how fragile this infrastructure is.

MOORE: Well, you know, these things happen. I mean, cables have been severed before. When the tsunami hit Japan, that resulted in Internet cables being severed. It’s disrupted a lot of commerce here. Africa is not as wired as many parts of the world, but more and more businesses are sprouting up. Some of the most prominent businesses on the continent are involved in eCommerce and rely on these Internet and phone connections for millions of links with the world outside of Africa and within the continent.

CORNISH: Lastly, how soon will this underwater cable be repaired? And how do they actually go about doing it?

MOORE: What we’re being told is it’s going to be three weeks of slow Internet, intermittent service, a lot of cost to businesses that need the Internet and these phone links. What that entails – the repair will entail ships going to these areas where the wires have been severed, submerging submarines, unmanned submarines, to go down and inspect these cables. Then submarines to bring them up to the surface, where they’ll be reattached in a clean environment aboard these cable ships.

Then they’ll be submerged again and, hopefully, everything will be back in working order in about three weeks’ time.

CORNISH: Solomon Moore, thank you so much for talking with us.

MOORE: You’re welcome.

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CORNISH: Solomon Moore is East Africa correspondent for the Wall Street Journal. He’s based in Nairobi.

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