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Cloud, Hosting, and Security Conference kicks off Photos – MyBroadband

MyBroadbands 2017 Cloud, Hosting, and Security Conference takes place at the Gallagher Convention Centre today.

The event has attracted over 1,700 IT executives and decision makers as delegates, and is the top conference of its kind in South Africa.

BCX, the leading player in South Africas cloud and hosting market, is the lead sponsor of the conference.

Telviva is the co-lead sponsor, with ODEK and Genesys partnering with MyBroadband as title sponsors of the event.

The conference has attracted an impressive speaker line-up, consisting of South African and international speakers.

Radio 702s Aki Anastasiou is MC for the event, with speakers from Amazon Web Services, BCX, SensePost, Dimension Data, Connection Telecom, SITA, Huawei, and many other leading organisations.

Here is a behind-the-scenes look at what delegates will be treated to at the conference.

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WhatsApp quietly added encryption to iCloud backups

WhatsApp has quietly beefedup the security of an iCloud backup feature for users of its messaging service potentially closing a loophole that couldenable otherwise end-to-end encrypted messages to become accessible in a readable form. Such as via a subpoena of Apple, which holds the encryption keys for iCloud, or by a hacker otherwisegaining access to a WhatsAppusers iCloud account.

According to a Forbes report, the Facebook-owned giant added encryption to WhatsApp iCloudbackups in late 2016, though it says the fact only emerged last week after a third party company whichsupplies mobile and cloud hacking tools claimed to be able to circumvent the security measure.

The company in question, Oxygen Forensics, told Forbesits workaroundonly works fora specific scenario whereby it has access to a SIM card with the same mobile number thatWhatsApp uses to senda verification code to generate the encryption key for the iCloud backup.

A WhatsApp spokesperson confirmed iCloud backups are now being encrypted, telling Forbes:When a user backs up their chats through WhatsApp to iCloud, the backup files are sent encrypted.

Forensic tools are apparently used to download the encrypted WhatsApp data backed up to iCloud. Then, usingthe associated SIM, Oxygen Forensics said it can generate the encryption key fordecrypting the databypassing the verification process again.

Forbes suggests themethod could be used, for example, by police in possession of a device where theWhatsApp account has been deleted but iCloud backups have not been wiped.

Weve reached out to WhatsApp with questions and will update this story with any response.

Political pressure on encryption appears to be hotting upagain. Giving evidence to a Senate oversight committee earlier this month, FBI director James Comey revealedthe agencyhad been unable toaccess the contents of more than 3,000 mobile devices in the first half of thefiscal year, despite having legal authority to access the data.

The FBI was involved in a high profile battle with Apple last yearwhen it went to court to tryto force the companyto weakenits security system to help investigatorsgain access toa locked iPhone. Apple resisted and in the endthe FBI paid a third party company to hack into the device. But the bureauappears eager to push for legislation to outlaw end-to-endencryption (i.e. where service providers dont hold the encryption keys themselves).

During last weeks hearing Comey complained that a case-by-caseapproach to breaking intostrongly encrypted devices and services does not scale, and backed fresh callsby Senator Dianne Feinstein forlegislation to require companies decrypt data when served a warrant setting the scene for another round of crypto wars in the US.

WhatsApp has been at the forefront of makingend-to-end encryption more accessible for mainstream app users, completing a rollout ofthe tech across its platform and all flavors of its apps in April 2016. Its also resisted legal attempts to strong arm it into handing over user data such as in Brazil where its service has been blocked multiple times as a penalty for its failuretoprovide decrypted data topolice. The company has maintained it cannot hand over informationit does not hold.

Adding encryption to iCloud backups would appear to be a reinforcement of WhatsAppsstance that user privacy is a necessity for data security. Albeit, one with a fair fewcaveats about how it hasimplemented the security layerhere. Not enabling WhatsApp iCloud backups is a more perfectfix foravoiding the cloud storage vulnerability loophole, though one that might be inconvenient from the users point of view.

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Good news! The entire Senate just embraced web encryption – ZDNet

Anyone now visiting their senator's website will see something new: a little green lock in their browser's address bar.

Last week the US Senate quietly began serving its entire domain -- including each of the 100 elected senators' websites -- over an encrypted HTTPS channel by default.

HTTPS isn't just reserved for banks and login pages anymore, and hasn't been for a long time. It's nowadays seen as a measure for sites taking their own security and the privacy of their visitors seriously.

The government has been on its own encryption binge for the past few years, trying to secure every page on every domain it has to ensure a standard level of security across the government domain space.

The logic is simple enough: Serving up each page through a secure and private connection ensures that every Senate page hasn't been intercepted or impersonated (which is easy to do) and modified by hackers -- or even intelligence agencies. It also protects the web address past the domain, in most cases preventing internet providers from knowing which individual pages a person visited.

You might wonder why everyone hasn't embraced it sooner. Encrypting web traffic used to be expensive, but the rise of free certificate services like Let's Encrypt has made it significantly cheaper to encrypt web pages.

Thats's the easy bit, because make no mistake -- switching from HTTP, where every byte travels the web without any encryption, to HTTPS is no small feat.

The project has taken over a year to complete, and has been a slow, tedious process of switching over each of the senator's sites incrementally to HTTPS by default. (A spokesperson for the Senate Sergeant at Arms, which headed the project, confirmed the timing but wouldn't comment further on the project.)

In order to switch over an entire site to HTTPS, every site element and component has to be served over the secure pipe. Given that the Senate domain has over a hundred individual senator's domains and committee sites, and many more for other sites and projects, amounting to millions of pages over many years, including some that are decades old -- it's not an overnight job.

But unlike the executive branch, which has all the help from the federal government to switch over to HTTPS, the legislative branch has been left mostly to its own devices.

The General Services Administration said it had no involvement in the Senate's switch. "In general, GSA supports increased use of HTTPS across public services, and actively supports the executive branch's efforts in this area," said a spokesperson.

In pushing ahead with its HTTPS project, the Senate leapfrogged the House with its own effort to encrypt its web pages. At the time of writing, every House lawmaker's website supports HTTPS, but only a little over half support HTTPS by default. (We asked the House's chief administrative officer for comment, and we'll update when we hear back.)

HTTPS by default is a good start, but there's more work to be done.

In January, the government announced it would not only strictly enforce HTTPS on each new government website but it would also preload its domains and subdomains directly into web browsers -- so that all browsers will always and by-default make a secure connection to a government website.

So far, plans have been made to preload executive branch websites, but it hasn't been ruled out as a possibility for Congress in the future.

Encryption remains a hot topic in Congress. It seems half of all lawmakers are for it, and half see it as a way for criminals and terrorists to get away with literal murder. In the past couple of years, we've seen several attempts by lawmakers to undermine the security protections that encryption offers, such as pushing for backdoors in existing encryption standards to make surveillance easier. Last year, in the wake of the San Bernardino terrorist attack, two senators pushed for their own anti-encryption bill that eventually failed.

That bill may be on deck to be reintroduced in the current session, sparking yet another protracted chapter in the ongoing crypto war.

Now that every senator's website offers encryption, remember that next time they bring out the pitchforks.

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Gov’t reverses course on TV encryption – TechCentral

Government is set to back encryption in digital terrestrial television, a sharp reversal of its position on the contentious subject, following the appointment of a new communications minister last month.

Government is set to back encryption in digital terrestrial television, a sharp reversal of its position on the contentious subject, following the appointment of a new communications minister last month.

Communications minister Ayanda Dlodlo confirmed in parliament on Tuesday that her departments policy on the issue willshift to one that favours encryption.

Last week, political journalist Stephen Grootes reported from the World Economic Forum on Africa event in Durban that the Dlodlo had said that government would implement encryption in digital set-top boxes, in line with ANC policy.

This is a reversal from the position held by her predecessor, Faith Muthambi, who was moved to the public service & administration portfolio last monthwhenPresident Jacob Zuma reshuffled his cabinet.

The change in direction comes ahead of a constitutional court judgment, expected to be handed down soon, that will deal with the issue. Muthambi supported in her application by MultiChoice challenged a supreme court of appeal judgment that found in favour of free-to-air broadcaster e.tv on the issue.

In May 2016, e.tv won a significant battle in the long-running war over encryption when the supreme court found that an amendment to the broadcasting digital migration policy by Muthambi, made in 2015, did not follow a process of consultation and was irrational and in breach of the principle of legality.

The court found, too, that the amendment did not achieve its purpose and was thus irrational and invalid. Muthambi purported to bind regulatory authorities and broadcasters and thus acted ultra vires (beyond her authority),the court said.

MultiChoice, which owns M-Net and DStv, and e.tv have been at each others throats for years over encryption of the signals. The pay-TV broadcaster has argued, among things, that putting encryption in government-provided free set-top boxes would amount to unfair competition. E.tv, on the other hand, argued that if this didnt happen, the free-to-air broadcasting sector in South Africa risked being ghettoised.

MultiChoice said on Tuesday that it isnot aware of any official position from government on the subject, and declined to comment further.

Democratic Alliance MP Marian Shinn described Dlodlos reversal of the policy a great step forward. (Also see the opinion piece, written by Shinn, Set-top box move is good news.)

The South African Communist Party welcomed the news of governments policy reversal, saying Muthambis 2015 amendment was done simply to benefit parasites and Naspers, which owns MultiChoice.

The SACP agrees with the basic principles underlying the policy, specifically the strategic aim to strengthen free-to-air, public and community television broadcasting, the party, which is an ANC alliance partner, said in a statement.

Former communications minister Faith Muthambi

Naspers was established during colonial rule in South Africa and served as the mouthpiece of the Broederbond, the ideological vanguard of apartheid. The action to strengthen its monopoly and parasites could only be the function of false radical economic transformation at the expense of true radical economic transformation, the SACP added.

In sharp contrast, true radical economic transformation must de-monopolise our economy. It must decisively elbow the stranglehold of private monopoly capital, concentration, oligopolies, oligarchs and parasites from the neck of our economy, including in the media and communications sector.

The digital terrestrial television broadcasting space must therefore be democratised by means of bringing an end to the monopoly of Nasperss MultiChoice.

The government must use the [broadcasting digital migration] process to expand access to new entrants. Encryption significantly lowers the financial barriers to entry for new entrants in the pay television sector, while allowing for state revenue generation to recover, over a few years, the cost of the initial subsidisation of [set-top boxes].

The SACP said, too, that the inclusion of encryption would give South Africans, including the poor, access to a variety of digital platforms including e-government services. E-government services can only be delivered in home language and geographically specific form, with [set-top boxes] that have functional conditional access/encryption chips.

The party called on Dlodlo to withdraw the appeal application before the constitutional court. 2017 NewsCentral Media

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I Side With the ‘Bad Guys’ on Encryption – Bloomberg – Bloomberg

Tough nut to crack.

One of the more intriguing pearls in FBI Director James Comeys testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week was his disclosure that the Bureau has been unable to penetrate the encryption on about half of the 6,000 cell phones seized in the course of various investigations between October and March. To Comey and the senators, this was plainly a problem. I will confess that my own feelings are more mixed.

Lets start at the top. Criminals and terrorists use cell phones. A lot. Those cell phones contain a trove of information: calls made and received, text messages, lists of contacts. But law enforcement is finding it harder and harder to penetrate the encryption that protects the privacy of ordinary users and bad guys alike.

Khalid Masood, who killed five people and injured 50 in a terror attack in London in March, used WhatsApp to send a message from his cell phone just before his rampage began. The appeal of WhatsApp is itsend-to-end encryption of whatever you send, encryption even the company cannot break. Initially, law enforcement worried publicly about being unable to read Masoods final message or discover the recipient. Some weeks later, the message was somehow retrieved. The means used have not been disclosed, but there has been speculation that the authorities never broke the encryption but instead somehow obtained Masoods password.

But WhatsApp itself -- the company is owned by Facebook -- has remained adamant that it will not install a backdoor allowing law enforcement agencies a way in. Were the company to yield on this point, its business model would collapse. The reason a billion people use the app is that they believe that nobody can eavesdrop on them.

To be sure, law enforcement has been complaining bitterly for some while now about its inability to break the encryption that is now almost a standard feature on much of social media and cell phones. Comey himself has argued for years that modern techniques for masking messages from unwanted readers has allowed terror groups to go dark. Law enforcement officials from around the world have demanded that tech companies build backdoors into their encryption software to enable authorities to gain access, provided a court issues a warrant. Privacy advocates are horrified.

Although I sympathize with the needs of law enforcement, I fear that my libertarian soul sides with the bad guys on this one.

By bad guys, I mean us -- people -- individuals -- who are not happy at the thought of governments snooping around our private lives. When the head of the FBI says to the tech companies, Please help us, he is in effect saying to ordinary users, Please trust us. And thats where the problem lies. Little in recent history -- or, for that matter, not-so-recent history -- offers any particular reason to believe that government officials, once granted a power, will use it sparingly.

Moreover, a warrant requirement offers little protection. The courts rarely say no, andrecent administrations, including those of PresidentDonald Trumps two predecessors, have found ways to get around judicial scrutiny. Nor has Trump himself given the impression that his use of such powers would be sparing. Buteven if we imagine a government run entirely by angels, we live at a time when intelligence agencies can hardly protect their own secrets, including their hacking tools. If the tech companies yield to official pressure and begin to build backdoors into their encryption, how long will it be until the details show up on WikiLeaks, and the actual methods are being bartered in various corners of the Dark Web?

Actually, the Dark Web is used these days by journalists, who try to evade the vast networks of official surveillance by offering sources the ability to remain anonymous while sending encrypted communications via SecureDrop. SecureDrop uses the Tor network of hidden servers to allow sources and reporters who never meet to exchange untappable messages. Among the many news outlets that have signed on are the Washington Post, the New York Times, and the New Yorker.

Now suppose that the U.S. government demanded that a backdoor be built into SecureDrop. After all, in the view of law enforcement, to disclose classified information to the news media is a crime. Under the Obama administration, more leakers were prosecuted for espionage -- espionage! -- than in all prior administrations combined.

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Why, then, are my feelings mixed? Because what Comey says is also likely true. The easy availability of state-of-the-art encryption does make the job of law enforcement more difficult. Terrorists would have to be very foolish indeed not to take advantage of the secure communications that modern technology makes available. In a word of reasoned and reasonable conversations, we might have an actual public conversation about how to strike the balance. But in a world where the model for public argument is the partisan screed, I fear I have to vote against trusting the good guys. Thats a painful line to write. Its also where we are.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story: Stephen L. Carter at scarter01@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tracy Walsh at twalsh67@bloomberg.net

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ACI achieves PCI Compliance for end-to-end encryption package – Finextra

ACI Worldwide (NASDAQ: ACIW), a leading global provider of real-time electronic payment and banking solutions, announced today that its Point-to-Point Encryption (P2PE) solution, part of the UP Merchant Payments platform, has been independently validated to meet the Payment Card Industry (PCI) P2PE Solution standard.

As a data security encryption technique, P2PE helps to considerably increase data security for consumers and merchants. It protects cardholder data by converting a consumers confidential credit or debit card data into indecipherable codes when the card is read by the payment terminal.

Andrew Quartermaine, vice president, SaaS solutions, ACI Worldwide comments: ACI is proud to have achieved the PCI compliance validation for its P2PE card payments solution. Merchants continue to come under intense scrutiny from their acquirers and other stakeholders. The solution not only enhances data security for our merchant customers, but also drives considerable cost savings as it dramatically reduces the time and money merchants must spend on the required annual assessment under the PCI Data Security Standard (PCI DSS).

We have now started the production roll-out of ACIs PCI-listed P2PE solution for a number of our UP Merchant Payments clients who will benefit from even higher levels of reliability, security and data privacy.

Ted Keniston, managing principal, P2PE, Coalfire comments: Coalfire is proud to have partnered with ACI to validate their P2PE solution. The process is rigorous and goes through several phases of analysis, testing and validation by our P2PE certified experts. Achieving validation will offer ACI clients the opportunity to reduce their PCI compliance burdens, while also providing them with the confidence of much higher levels of security and protection for their transactions.

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Bitcoin soars past $1700 – MarketWatch

Bitcoin surged past $1,700 on Tuesday, extending an astonishing rally that has seen the total market value of all virtual currencies more than double since the beginning of 2017.

The price of a single bitcoin BTCUSD, +7.86% has gained more than $300 in the past week, to trade as high as $1,747 on Tuesday, according to the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index, which aggregates pricing across a handful of the largest exchanges. Meanwhile, daily trading volume has surpassed $1.3 billion for the first time, according to Coin Market Cap.

However, prices varied widely between exchanges. On Kraken, one of the biggest U.S.-based exchanges, one bitcoin recently went for $1,578, while simultaneously trading at $1,742 on GDAX, another popular U.S.-based digital-currency exchange.

Price discrepancies were even wider across different markets, with coins trading on Korean exchanges like Korbit and Coinone in excess of $2,000, valued in Korean won USDKRW, +0.49%

Spencer Bogart, head of research at Blockchain Capital, said the Securities and Exchange Commissions decision to revisit its rejection of the proposed Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust exchange-traded fund was one possible catalyst for bitcoins recent rally.

But he said the massive appreciation in smaller rivals like Litecoin and Ripple has probably contributed to the bulk of bitcoins move: Many of these coins are denominated in bitcoin, so investors who wish to buy them must first have it on hand.

The virtual-currency market has all the trappings of a bubble, Bogart said, though he thinks it could have more room to rise before a correction occurs. A correction is typically defined as a decline in an asset from a recent peak of at least 10%.

Its definitely unsustainable, Bogart said, though I dont know if its in its final moments right now.

Chris Dannen, founder of New York-based cryptoasset fund Iterative Instinct, said the massive wealth creation in the space has fostered a pattern where wealth shuttles back and forth between bitcoin and other alt-coins, or alternative cryptocurrencies.

Though Dannen added that he suspects at least some of the recent run-up could be the result of manipulation by a handful of whaleswealthy traders with large reservoirs of cryptocurrency wealth, who use their relative heft in the marketplace to move prices to their advantage.

Theres a group of whales out there, they kind of bounce around from coin to coin, he said. They clearly have a system. Its almost like the tide is coming in and out; you know theres a pattern.

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How One Scrappy Startup Survived the Early Bitcoin Wars – WIRED

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How One Scrappy Startup Survived the Early Bitcoin Wars - WIRED

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6 Reasons To Buy Bitcoin At Its $1722 Record High – Seeking Alpha

Bitcoin prices just hit another all-time high at $1,722. Most of the reasons why I've been bullish on the digital currency or asset remain in place. Here are six of the most important:

1. Venture Capital is betting big

By now there is $1.5 billion in venture capital backing various cryptocurrency ventures. These are mostly startups working to make blockchain and cryptocurrencies more accessible and or more useful. Payment systems benefit from a network effect, gaining traction is very important. So far this year about $100 million of venture capital went into the space which is slightly behind the pace for 2016.

2. The Network Effect

As I said there is something of a network effect and Back in 2013 there were only 13.000 wallets on Coinbase. Today there are 6.8 million. Coinbase is backed by major names in the venture capital world:

3. Big business adding to the ecosystem

It's not just venture capital that's building out the ecosystem. A big name like IBM (IBM) is issuing a steady stream of blockchain related press releases like this one and this one. Overstock (OSTK) build the first blockchain stock exchange and issued a preferred share through it. Microsoft (MSFT) started accepting Bitcoin.

4. Hedge Funds buying in

The graphs below show Google search interest in Bitcoin, courtesy of Bitcoinist, and interest by city. The interest by city shows heightened interest from the hedge fund communities close to New York City. Which suggests the people living here are educating themselves on cryptocurrencies:

5. Asset management and family offices buying in

Asset management firms and family offices are increasingly acknowledging the potential of cryptocurrencies and so are hedge funds. In a previous article Ive already documented how U.S. asset management firm Horizon Kinetics started a Bitcoin fund for its clients (emphasis mine) and there was a lot of interest:

In 2016, Horizon Kinetics also established a fund that invests in bitcoin. Bitcoin is an example of a cryptocurrency. This asset class will be discussed more fully in the section pertaining to our investment in Digital Currency Group. This asset class did not exist several years ago; it is entirely new. The fund established an investment maximum of $50,000 per client. We are not aware of any other firm that so constrains client contributions. However, we believe it is the easiest and most obvious way to control risk. We simply limit the amount of money that can possibly be lost to an amount that is tolerable. Investment firms often complain about the short-term focus of clients. The short-term focus is more understandable if the investment in failure mode could quite negatively impact their lives. In any case, we rapidly sold essentially every available slot in the fund.

Later I heard from the company they have two funds that are open to accredited investors only.

Ark Invest holds bitcoin through the well known GBTC trust. Their whitepaper is a must read. They hold GBTC in its Next Generation Internet ETF (ARKW) and the ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK). Horizon Kinetics also invests in GBTC though its Kinetics Internet Fund No Load (WWWFX), Kinetics Paradigm Fund No Load (WWNPX) and Kinetics Market Opportunities (KMKAX). When fund buying becomes widespread this can really move Bitcoin in a big way, as I previously wrote:

1) On a global basis there's over $100 trillion in assets under management. Imagine only a 1/10th of 1% getting moved into bitcoin.

2) Institutions holding for diversification or long-term investment purposes may have much steadier hands than the current bitcoin traders, which could help stabilize bitcoin's volatility, which would in turn make it more attractive to other investors and retailers.

6. Bitcoin runway

With Bitcoin now hitting record highs and no clear way to value it many people will be thinking: I guess I missed the boat. One way I think about it is as follows; can Bitcoin, or another cryptocurrency, reach the market cap of Visa? Perhaps displace Visa (V)? Could it become something like digital gold? Can it replace the Dollar as a reserve currency? If your answer is yes to any of these questions it can at least quadruple:

Source: Created by author.

Easy ways to get some Bitcoin:

I use the above-mentioned Coinbase, which is a cloud based cryptowallet. It is very user-friendly. No advanced tech knowledge is required. In addition, you can also hold Ethereum and other emerging cryptocurrencies, which is very interesting and convenient to me.

Disclosure: I am/we are long OSTK, FRMO.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Additional disclosure: I also have some exposure to Bitcoin and other cyrptocurrencies.

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6 Reasons To Buy Bitcoin At Its $1722 Record High - Seeking Alpha

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Bitcoin Price Analysis: $1700 and Rising (But So Are Fees) – Bitcoin Magazine


Bitcoin Magazine
Bitcoin Price Analysis: $1700 and Rising (But So Are Fees)
Bitcoin Magazine
With bitcoin making new all-time highs (ATHs) in price and market capitalization almost every day, the block size and scalability debate has taken a back seat over the past week. From a user perspective, unconfirmed transactions are on the rise due to ...

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Bitcoin Price Analysis: $1700 and Rising (But So Are Fees) - Bitcoin Magazine

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