Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Malwares on the rise

Goldman Sachs’ well-known 2003 BRIC report was the first to predict India would become the world’s third largest economy after China and the US. But with India now sustaining 8 per cent annual growth, Goldman Sachs has since revised its estimates, placing India ahead of the US by mid-century.
Recently, the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN) reported that both government and company websites have seen increasing numbers of defacements. 430 websites were hit in December 2006 alone. About 25 per cent of these have been attributed to the ‘LORD’ defacer team, a Turkish group that leaves messages on targetted websites, after each attack. Such groups seek self-praise, and opportunities to disseminate their own brand of political or religious messages. Defacement has become such a problem that in December 2006, the Indian Ministry of Home Affairs ordered all ministries and government departments to host their sites only on government-owned servers.
The spread of ‘malware’ is driven by the prospect of economic gain. Each successful attack makes cyber criminals wealthier, giving them more financial power to create larger engines of destruction. The old hacker stereotype of a lonely, bespectacled computer-geek, logging on from his parents’ basement is slowly being replaced with one of wealthy individuals, with multiple employees and large bankrolls of illicit cash.
What’s worse is that not only is the frequency and sophistication of the attacks increasing, but so is the amount of resulting damage. A Gartner Group report showed 2006 profits from phishing scams rose over 400 per cent, from $257 per victim to $1,244 per victim.
As the cyber crime industry grows and becomes more organised, it is becoming easier for attackers to execute their strikes. And it is now actually possible to buy and sell malware in underground marketplaces. The most successful cyber criminals today are not the ones who perpetrate attacks directly, but those who provide the infrastructure by creating illicit attack tools and selling them to others.
With the Indian Technology, already taken a considerable lead in view of the rest of the world, with regard to the IT industry, India can now take on others in Information Security.Our continued global success depends on how securely we can remain connected to the rest of the world in terms of economy, information, and most importantly, technological infrastructure. Some early steps in this direction have already been taken with the passage of the Information Technology Act, 2000. Continued national leadership, standardisation and security guidance are one of several important layers of a successful IT security environment.
Network security today goes far beyond simply patching up individual system vulnerabilities; and it goes beyond protecting one’s company against nuisance attacks and common viruses. Network secrurity is also about protecting your money. The malware economy has become increasingly organised, and to fight it effectively, companies, governments and IT security firms will have to begin doing the same.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

I can't go on.............

Those lonely days,
Those lonely nights,
That weeping face,
Those crying eyes,
What she said I’ll never forget,
Those words felt like,
Swords in my chest .

How she went away that night,
I’ll never forget her,
In that shining moonlight,
Lonely in my bed I felt,
How a part of my life,
Had just left.

My weeping soul,
Didn’t go to sleep,
The pain she gave to my heart,
I’ll always keep.

Feeling her love in my blood,
Never had I felt this weak.
Rushing through my veins it kept,
Spreading like damn disease.

Cut my wrists to see how it felt,
Without her love that my blood had held,
Every drop seemed to be the last,
Just wanting it to finish fast.
But when I actualised, That my love had left,

I realized I was already dead,
Then I thought, what I perceived was wrong,
Without her love, I just can't go on........

Monday, March 12, 2007

Go, fall in love

Look into my eyes
You'll see your face
Smiling, at you
Coz you still don't see
Someone, looking at thee

Listen to me when I sing
You'll hear your heartbeats
Dancing to the very tune
And you still don't hear
You haven't given up fear

Think of me crying
Can you stop your tears?
They'll not listen to you
But you still put it strong
This love, it will never go wrong

And now
Look into the mirror
Are you alone, for sure?
Isn't there someone looking at you?
Someone...
Listening to you?
Smiling at you?
Crying for you?
Dreaming of you?
Thinking, loving, waiting for you?

Take a look into the mirror
And you'll see him
Inside your heart

He has nothing
Nothing but this hope
And you have him, completely.

Don't let him die
Die within you
Coz he's lived once
And loved only once
And will never again.

Go, fall in love with him
Trust him this once
It's not that difficult, dear
Let life be, what it wants to be
Go, go, go
Go, fall in love with him.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Inflation in India : The Blues

WPI (Wholesale Price Index) inflation is at 6.58 per cent; and “in view of the paramount need to contain inflation expectations”, the RBI has yet again upped the cash reserve ratio of banks by half a percentage point to 6 per cent of net demand and term liabilities.

How serious is our current bout of inflation? What drives it? Can RBI’s monetary and credit tightening policies work? If not, what will?

For all of corporate India’s good news, ours is a nation of over 500 million poor people. That being so, every government in India is hyper-sensitive about inflation. As Mr P. Chidambaram once said to me, “At 6 per cent inflation, the government’s boat starts to rock; at over 8 per cent, there can be blood on the streets.

As the chart shows, the 13-w MA of primary product inflation has been rising since May 2006, and now stands at 8.4 per cent, with no signs of letting up. Incidentally, the point-to-point primary products inflation on 27 January was 10.7 per cent. Manufactures inflation has increased from 1.9 per cent in early May 2006 to 5.2 per cent today, and is still on the rise — with the latest point-to-point estimate being 6.2 per cent. The saving grace has been fuel, power and lubricants, whose inflation has dropped significantly since July 2006, and stands at 4.1 per cent today, with the point-to-point at 3.7 per cent. Had crude reigned at $70 per barrel, we would have faced a WPI inflation of over 7.5 per cent.

If you carefully look at the data, you will be convinced, as I am, that our current WPI inflation is driven largely by supply side factors. That being so, there is little that monetary policy can do other than reduce money supply, hike interest rates and, in the process, possibly choke some of the growth impulse. When inflation is supply driven, it requires freeing up imports of primary products, sharply reducing tariffs on manufactures, and betting on a plentiful rabi crop. In any event, we are possibly looking at over 6 per cent inflation for another month or two.

But since RBI must be seen to be doing something, act it certainly will. So, expect yet another round of credit tightening fairly soon — which will not really dampen WPI inflation but can harm growth.


So Bright .............

Twist of fate, Destiny awaits,
Throw me off a cliff and watch me fly,
I will see that you are left dry,
Blood and gore will always be mine,
I know I aint a monster but still I wont sublime,

Crawl through me and take my blood,
You will feel the poison that flows like flood,
When you see the stars you will feel their pain,
Its time to realize that you have turned insane,

Fear the wrath above ur head,
I will make you realize as I said,
That poison aint just your food,
Coz I live upon it and now I am more shrewd.

You know its never over when you think it is,
It’s just the time you mite have bought on lease,
Wait for the time to come again,
Yet another history rewritten on this stage,

I will see that you soon realize,
It’s not just sickening thought but a sickening sight,
I shall rise and I shall fight,
But fight with whom, the one that gave me light??
Ahh - are you the one who gave me light?
Then show me that this light is not the light of darkness -

Not the light of darkness that switched so bright………

 
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