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Posts Tagged ‘BBN Technologies’

Happy 40th, Internet: Leo Beranek talks about the Series of Tubes in its infancy

Friday, October 30th, 2009

To mark the Internet’s 40th birthday yesterday, the Guardian traces the history of the Internet with a dense interactive timeline. Popular Science covers the same ground via text and photos.

Last week, Mass High Tech asked Leo Beranek, “the second B in BBN,” to sit down with MassTLC chair Steve O’Leary, in an exclusive dialogue about Beranek’s career in technology and entrepreneurship. The interview took place at the Harvard Club in Back Bay in anticipation of MassTLC giving Beranek its Commonwealth Award. In the clip above, Beranek talks about BBN’s role in developing the ARPANet, the forerunner of the Internet.

Keep an eye out for the more video of the interview and a complete transcript running on MHT soon.

Skype virus steals your voice

Friday, September 4th, 2009

The AP is reporting a Skype virus making the rounds can record phone calls made over the service, save the audio as an MP3, and email it to other computers. The hack taps into the computer’s OS to record the computer’s audio before it’s encrypted by Skype.

Mudge

Mudge

Former L0pht Heavy Industries hacker Mudge, aka Peiter Zatko, a security researcher at BBN Technologies, just got back from Italy to find BBN had been bought by Raytheon. Via email, he said the Skype virus tactic isn’t new, comparing it to hackers stealing banking information by recording keystrokes. 

“The fact that this is relatively well known does not speak well for the progress that our consumer computer security has made over the years,” he said. 

The issue stems from the multitasking we demand from our computers — different applications have different security needs, but the OS doesn’t serve them.

“Would you be happy if you could play video games and listen to online music at the ATM when you walk in to your bank? I wouldn’t. I want that system to be specific and dedicated to processing my bank requests,” Mudge said.

The AP report suggests the virus works better as a targeted attack, rather than a widespread virus. To defend against it, Mudge suggests disabling Javascript and similar  programs in your browser; disabling HTML and content rendering in e-mail programs; being savvy about e-mail attachments and links and Internet sites; and running each application on a separate virtual machine, then reverting to a clean install state. And he said all that is just a start.  

“Once your computer is compromised, it doesn’t matter if you are using encrypted network communications … you’ve lost,” he said.

Good week for VC on BBN, Marvel boards

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Silicon Valley-based Jim Breyer, of Accel Partners, sits on the board of both BBN, which Raytheon bought today, and Marvel, which Disney bought yesterday.

Breyer is Accel’s representative at BBN, but invested his own money in Marvel. Raytheon isn’t releasing financial details from the BBN acquisition, but PEHub reports Breyer made out well from the Marvel deal:

As the third largest direct shareholder in Marvel Entertainment, Breyer stands to make nearly $5 million once Disney’s acquisition of the superhero company closes.

Disney said this morning that it plans to pay $4 billion in cash and stock for Marvel. Marvel shareholders — Breyer has 165,700, according to regulatory filings — will get $30 a share plus around 3/4 of a Disney share, a 29 percent premium over Marvel’s closing price on Friday.

NewsFlash Roundup: Vela Systems, FRX, Happn.In, Venturefizz.com

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
NE Tech Stock Index

NE Tech Stock Index

Vela Systems and FRX get funding, and two startups try to organize the hub’s info in today’s NewsFlash Roundup.  

Vela Systems adds on $4.5M to first round

The Burlington-based maker of mobile field administration software for the architecture, engineering and construction agencies announced in 2007 that it had closed a $6 million Series A. The second close on that fund brings Vela Systems’ Series A to $10.5 million, and its total funding to at least $11.9 million – including a $1.4 million angel round closed in 2006.

Green plastics startup FRX nets $6M

The two-year old Chelmsford company is developing plastic polymers that are tough and have high melting points that can be used as flame retardant additives. FRX officials said these materials do not include halogens like traditional flame retardants, making them safer for the environment. The materials can also be used as stand-alone plastics.

Pair of web play startups serve up Hub info

Two new sites — Happn.in, and Venturefizz.com, — are offering themselves up as hubs of all things Boston. One is tracking Beantown’s Twitter memes; the other is mapping the Bay State’s high-tech economy by aggregating job postings, company profiles, news feeds and influential tech blogs in one place. (more…)

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