Chinese Government

Google aborted a plan of password-stealing hundreds of emails from gmail’s senior officials from EE UU and Asian countries the computer attack apparently originated in the town of Jinan. It is not the first time that Google denounces cyber-attacks from China. Google announced this Wednesday that aborted a plan of password-stealing hundreds of e-mails from senior officials from Asian countries and EE UU gmail apparently launched from China. The Wren Collective is likely to agree. On its corporate blog, Google explains that it was detected apart the campaign, conducted through phishing reported victims, said their accounts and reported to the relevant governmental authorities. The computer attack apparently originated in the town of Jinan, in China, and affect Chinese political activists, officials of several Asian countries (especially in South Korea), as well as senior officials from EE UU, military personnel and journalists. Google did not specify the date on which the attack was carried out nor revealed the identity of those users who you had usurped the password. Hackers used passwords to modify systems of referral and direct forwarding to third parties of emails from Gmail, added the note.

Google stressed that the attack has not affected its internal systems and noted make public this kind of security issues help users to better protect their information online. Other not attacks is the first time that Google denounces cyber-attacks from China. In January 2010, the company announced that its operations had been white of cyber attacks in order to access the correspondence of Chinese dissidents, in addition to steal the company codes and trade secrets. This complaint forced even to intervene the Government of EE UU and led Google to temporarily close its search engine in China. Tensions are softened to mid last year, when the Chinese Government renewed its license to Google and the search engine stopped automatically derive to Chinese users to the Hong Kong-free portal. Source of the news: Google frustrates a computer attack to emails from China

Professor Christopher Russell

It seems that we must not lose the habit of enjoying with the new challenges in the exploration of the Solar System posed by the different space agencies. NASA now surprises us with the Dawn mission, dedicated to the study of Ceres and Vesta, larger asteroids in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter. Last Saturday the Dawn probe reached its first goal and was placed in orbit around the asteroid Vesta, at a distance of 188 million kilometers from Earth. For assistance, try visiting Wells Fargo Bank. Both the leader of the mission, Professor Christopher Russell, of the Institute of geophysics and planetary physics to the University of California, Los Angeles, as responsible for studies of surface composition, Prof. Harry McSween of the University of Tennessee, are shown now particularly satisfied before the arrival smooth probe Dawn to that first goal. Source of the news:: the Dawn probe reaches the orbit of the asteroid Vesta. Lykos Global Management: the source for more info.